ALMA Observations of Giant Molecular Clouds in M33. II. Triggered High-mass Star Formation by Multiple Gas Colliding Events at the NGC 604 Complex (2009.05804v1)
Abstract: We present the results of ALMA observations in ${12}$CO($J=2-1$), ${13}$CO($J=2-1$), and C${18}$O($J=2-1$) lines and 1.3 mm continuum emission toward a massive ($\sim 106 M_{\odot}$) giant molecular cloud associated with the giant H II region NGC 604 in one of the nearest spiral galaxy M33 at an angular resolution of 0''.44 $\times$ 0''.27 (1.8 pc $\times$ 1.1 pc). The ${12}$CO and ${13}$CO images show highly complicated molecular structures composed of a lot of filaments and shells whose lengths are 5 -- 20 pc. We found three 1.3 mm continuum sources as dense clumps at edges of two shells and also at an intersection of several filaments. We examined the velocity structures of ${12}$CO($J=2-1$) emission in the shells and filaments containing dense clumps, and concluded that expansion of the H II regions cannot explain the formation of such dense cores. Alternatively, we suggest that cloud--cloud collisions induced by an external H I gas flow and the galactic rotation compressed the molecular material into dense filaments/shells as ongoing high-mass star formation sites. We propose that multiple gas converging/colliding events with a velocity of a few tens km s${-1}$ are necessary to build up NGC 604, the most significant cluster-forming complex in the Local Group of galaxies.
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.