Interaction between Ionized and Molecular Gas in the Active Star-Forming Region W31

Abstract

We have carried out 21 cm radio continuum, H76α radio recombination line, and various (CO, 13CO, CS, & C34S) molecular line observations of the W31 complex. Our radio continuum data show that W31 is composed of two extended HII regions, G10.2-0.3 and G10.3-0.1, each of which comprises an ultracompact HII region, two or more compact components, and diffuse envelope. The W31 cloud appears as an incomplete shell on the whole and consists of southern spherical and northern flat components, which are associated with G10.2-0.3 and G10.3-0.1, respectively. We detect two large and massive CS-emitting regions in the northern and southern cloud components. The large amount of dense gas may suggest that the W31 cloud has ability to form rich stellar clusters and that star formation has only recently begun. The extended envelopes of both G10.2-0.3 and G10.3-0.1 are likely to be results of the champagne flows, based on the distributions of ionized and molecular gas and the velocity gradient of H76α line emission. We find strong evidence of bipolar molecular outflows associated with the two ultracompact HII regions. In the vicinity of the ultracompact and compact HII regions in G10.3-0.1, the CO J=2-1/J=1-0 intensity ratio is high (1.4) and a small but prominent molecular gas hollow exists. These observations strongly indicate that the HII regions and their ionizing stars are interacting with the molecular cloud. Therefore, it is most likely that recently formed massive stars are actively disrupting their parental molecular cloud in the W31 complex.

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