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Compact and High Excitation Molecular Clumps in the Extended Ultraviolet Disk of M83

Authors :
Koda, Jin
Combes, Francoise
Rubio, Monica
Andersen, Morten
Bigiel, Frank
de Paz, Armando Gil
Junais
Lee, Amanda M
Meyer, Jennifer Donovan
Morokuma-Matsui, Kana
Yagi, Masafumi
Zavagno, Annie
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The extended ultraviolet (XUV) disks of nearby galaxies show ongoing massive star formation, but their parental molecular clouds remain mostly undetected despite searches in CO(1-0) and CO(2-1). The recent detection of 23 clouds in the higher excitation transition CO(3-2) within the XUV disk of M83 requires an explanation. We test the hypothesis: the clouds in XUV disks have a clump-envelope structure similar to those in Galactic star-forming clouds, having star-forming dense clumps (or concentrations of multiple clumps) at their centers, which predominantly contribute to the CO(3-2) emission, surrounded by less-dense envelopes, where CO molecules are photo-dissociated due to the low-metallicity environment there. We utilize new high-resolution ALMA CO(3-2) observations of a subset (11) of the 23 clouds in the XUV disk. We confirm the compactness of the CO(3-2)-emitting dense clumps (or their concentrations), finding clump diameters below the spatial resolution of 6-9~pc. This is similar to the size of the dense gas region in the Orion A molecular cloud, the local star-forming cloud with massive star formation. The dense star-forming clumps are common between normal and XUV disks. This may also indicate that once the cloud structure is set, the process of star formation is governed by the cloud internal physics rather than by external triggers. This simple model explains the current observations of the clouds with ongoing massive star formation, although it may require some adjustment, e.g., including an effect of cloud evolution, for a general scenario of star formation in molecular clouds.<br />Comment: A&A accepted; 15 pages, 8 figures - after proof

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2410.00180
Document Type :
Working Paper