Deep Andromeda JCMT SCUBA-2 Observations. The Submillimeter Maps and Giant Molecular Clouds
/ Authors
Sihan Jiao, Jingwen Wu, H. Liu, Chaowei Tsai, Yuxin Lin, Di Li, Zhi-Yu Zhang, Yu Cheng, Linjing Feng, H. Beuther
and 16 more authors
Junzhi Wang, Lihwai Lin, J. D. den Brok, Ludan Zhang, Fengwei Xu, Fanyi Meng, Zongnan Li, R. P. Keenan, Siyang Yu, Niankun Yu, Zheng Zheng, Junhao Liu, Yuxiang Liu, Hao Ruan, Fangyuan Deng, Yuanzhen Xiong
/ Abstract
We have carried out unprecedentedly deep, nearly confusion-limited JCMT SCUBA-2 mapping observations on the nearest spiral galaxy, M31 (Andromeda). The 850 μm image with a ∼50 pc resolution yields a comprehensive catalog of 383 giant molecular clouds (GMCs) that are associated with the spiral arms. In addition, it unveiled a population of 189 compact interarm GMCs in M31, which are mostly unresolved or marginally resolved. The masses of all these GMCs are in the range of 2 × 104–6 × 106 M⊙; the sizes are in the range of 30–130 pc. They follow a mass–size correlation, M ∝ Rc2.5. The interarm GMCs are systematically less massive, more diffuse, colder, and have lower star formation efficiency (SFE) than on-arm GMCs. Moreover, within individual spatially resolved on-arm and off-arm M31 GMCs, the SFE is considerably lower than the SFE in molecular clouds in main-sequence and green valley galaxies. Follow-up investigations on M31 GMCs may provide clues for how star formation may be quenched in galactic environments. Finally, we reconstrained the dust opacity spectral index β in the M31 galaxy by combining our new JCMT observations with archival Herschel and Planck data and found that the radial variation in β may not be as large as has been proposed by previous studies.
Journal: The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series