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Oversized Gas Clumps in an Extremely Metal-poor Molecular Cloud Revealed by ALMA’s Parsec-scale Maps.

Authors :
Yong Shi
Junzhi Wang
Zhi-Yu Zhang
Qizhou Zhang
Yu Gao
Luwenjia Zhou
Qiusheng Gu
Keping Qiu
Xiao-Yang Xia
Cai-Na Hao
Yanmei Chen
Source :
Astrophysical Journal; 4/1/2020, Vol. 892 Issue 2, p1-1, 1p
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Metals are thought to have profound effects on the internal structures of the molecular clouds in which stars are born. The absence of metals is expected to prevent gas from efficient cooling and fragmentation in theory. However, this effect has not yet been observed in low-metallicity environments, such as in the early universe and local dwarf galaxies, because of the lack of high-spatial-resolution maps of gas. We carried out Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array observations of the carbon monoxide (CO) J = 2–1 emission line at 1.4 parsec resolutions of a molecular cloud in DDO 70 at 7% solar metallicity, the most metal-poor galaxy currently known with a CO detection. In total, five clumps have been identified and they are found to more or less follow Larson’s law. Since the CO emission exists in regions with visual extinction A<subscript>V</subscript> around 1.0, we converted this A<subscript>V</subscript> to the gas-mass surface density using a gas-to-dust ratio of 4594 ± 2848 for DDO 70. We found that the CO clumps in DDO 70 exhibit significantly larger (on average four times) sizes than those at the same gas-mass surface densities in the massive star formation regions of the Milky Way. The existence of such large clumps appears to be consistent with theoretical expectations that gas fragmentation in low-metallicity clouds is suppressed. While our observation is only for one cloud in the galaxy, if it is representative, the above result implies suppressed gas fragmentation during the cloud collapse and star formation in the early universe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0004637X
Volume :
892
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Astrophysical Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
142604996
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ab7a12