The G332 molecular cloud ring: I. Morphology and physical characteristics

Abstract

We present a morphological and physical analysis of a Giant Molecular Cloud (GMC) using the carbon monoxide isotopologues (12CO, 13CO, C18O 3P2→ 3P1) survey of the Galactic Plane (Mopra CO Southern Galactic Plane Survey), supplemented with neutral carbon maps from the HEAT telescope in Antarctica. The giant molecular cloud structure (hereinafter the ring) covers the sky region 332 < < 333 and b = 0.5 (hereinafter the G332 region). The mass of the ring and its distance are determined to be respectively ~2×105M and ~3.7 kpc from Sun. The dark molecular gas fraction, estimated from the 13CO and [CI] lines, is 17\% for a CO Tex between [10,20 K]. Comparing the [CI] integrated intensity and N(H2) traced by 13CO and 12CO, we define an XCI809 factor, analogous to the usual Xco, through the [CI] line. XCI809 ranges between [1.8,2.0]×1021cm-2K-1km-1s. We examined local variation in Xco and Tex across the cloud, and find in regions where the star formation activity is not in an advanced state, an increase in the mean and dispersion of the Xco factor as the excitation temperature decreases. We present a catalogue of C18O clumps within the cloud. The star formation (SF) activity ongoing in the cloud shows a correlation with Tex, [CI] and CO emissions, and anti-correlation with Xco, suggesting a North-South spatial gradient in the SF activity. We propose a method to disentangle dust emission across the Galaxy, using HI and 13CO data. We describe Virtual Reality (VR) and Augmented Reality (AR) data visualisation techniques for the analysis of radio astronomy data.

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