ALMA Observations of Giant Molecular Clouds in M33. III. Spatially Resolved Features of the Star formation Inactive Million-solar-mass Cloud

Author:

Kondo HiroshiORCID,Tokuda KazukiORCID,Muraoka KazuyukiORCID,Nishimura AtsushiORCID,Fujita ShinjiORCID,Tosaki TomokaORCID,Zahorecz SaroltaORCID,Miura Rie E.ORCID,Kobayashi Masato I. N.ORCID,Onodera Sachiko,Torii KazufumiORCID,Kuno NarioORCID,Sano HidetoshiORCID,Onishi ToshikazuORCID,Saigo Kazuya,Fukui Yasuo,Kawamura AkikoORCID,Tsuge KisetsuORCID,Tachihara KengoORCID

Abstract

Abstract We present 12CO (J = 2–1), 13CO (J = 2–1), and C18O (J = 2–1) observations toward GMC-8, one of the most massive giant molecular clouds (GMCs) in M33 using ALMA with an angular resolution of 0.″44 × 0.″27 (∼2 pc × 1 pc). The earlier studies revealed that its high-mass star formation is inactive in spite of a sufficient molecular reservoir with a total mass of ∼106 M . The high-angular resolution data enable us to resolve this peculiar source down to a molecular clump scale. One of the GMC’s remarkable features is that a round-shaped gas structure (the “Main cloud”) extends over the ∼50 pc scale, which is quite different from the other two active star-forming GMCs dominated by remarkable filaments/shells obtained by our series of studies in M33. The fraction of the relatively dense gas traced by the 13CO data with respect to the total molecular mass is only ∼2%, suggesting that their spatial structure and the density are not well developed to reach an active star formation. The CO velocity analysis shows that the GMC is composed of a single component as a whole, but we found some local velocity fluctuations in the Main cloud and extra blueshifted components at the outer regions. Comparing the CO with previously published large-scale H i data, we suggest that an external atomic gas flow supplied a sufficient amount of material to grow the GMC up to ∼106 M .

Publisher

American Astronomical Society

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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