Kinetic temperature of massive star-forming molecular clumps measured with formaldehyde IV. The ALMA view of N113 and N159W in the LMC

Abstract

We mapped the kinetic temperature structure of two massive star-forming regions, N113 and N159W, in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC). We have used 1\,.\!\!6\,(0.4\,pc) resolution measurements of the para-H2CO\,J K aKc\,=\,303--202, 322--221, and 321--220 transitions near 218.5\,GHz to constrain RADEX non-LTE models of the physical conditions. The gas kinetic temperatures derived from the para-H2CO line ratios 322--221/303--202 and 321--220/303--202 range from 28 to 105\,K in N113 and 29 to 68\,K in N159W. Distributions of the dense gas traced by para-H2CO agree with those of the 1.3\,mm dust and Spitzer\,8.0\,μm emission, but do not significantly correlate with the Hα emission. The high kinetic temperatures (T kin\,\,50\,K) of the dense gas traced by para-H2CO appear to be correlated with the embedded infrared sources inside the clouds and/or YSOs in the N113 and N159W regions. The lower temperatures (T kin\,<\,50\,K) are measured at the outskirts of the H2CO-bearing distributions of both N113 and N159W. It seems that the kinetic temperatures of the dense gas traced by para-H2CO are weakly affected by the external sources of the Hα emission. The non-thermal velocity dispersions of para-H2CO are well correlated with the gas kinetic temperatures in the N113 region, implying that the higher kinetic temperature traced by para-H2CO is related to turbulence on a 0.4\,pc scale. The dense gas heating appears to be dominated by internal star formation activity, radiation, and/or turbulence. It seems that the mechanism heating the dense gas of the star-forming regions in the LMC is consistent with that in Galactic massive star-forming regions located in the Galactic plane.

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