Molecular line mapping of the giant molecular cloud associated with RCW 106 - II. Column density and dynamical state of the clumps
/ Authors
Tony Wong, Tony Wong, Tony Wong, E. Ladd, D. Brisbin, D. Brisbin, M. G. Burton, I. Bains, I. Bains, Maria Cunningham
and 13 more authors
Nadia Lo, Nadia Lo, P. Jones, K. Thomas, S. Longmore, S. Longmore, S. Longmore, Arthur Vigan, B. Mookerjea, B. Mookerjea, C. Kramer, Y. Fukui, A. Kawamura
/ Abstract
We present a fully sampled C 18 O (1-0) map towards the southern giant molecular cloud (GMC) associated with the H II region RCW 106, and use it in combination with previous 1 3 CO (1-0) mapping to estimate the gas column density as a function of position and velocity. We find localized regions of significant 13 CO optical depth in the northern part of the cloud, with several of the high-opacity clouds in this region likely associated with a limb-brightened shell around the HII region G333.6-0.2. Optical depth corrections broaden the distribution of column densities in the cloud, yielding a lognormal distribution as predicted by simulations of turbulence. Decomposing the 13 CO and C 18 O data cubes into clumps, we find relatively weak correlations between size and linewidth, and a more sensitive dependence of luminosity on size than would be predicted by a constant average column density. The clump mass spectrum has a slope near -1.7, consistent with previous studies. The most massive clumps appear to have gravitational binding energies well in excess of virial equilibrium; we discuss possible explanations, which include magnetic support and neglect of time-varying surface terms in the virial theorem. Unlike molecular clouds as a whole, the clumps within the RCW 106 GMC, while elongated, appear to show random orientations with respect to the Galactic plane.
Journal: Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society