Where massive stars form - Associated radio H II regions and CO clouds in the northern Milky Way

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astronomy

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Carbon Monoxide, H Ii Regions, Interstellar Gas, Milky Way Galaxy, Molecular Clouds, Radio Sources (Astronomy), Star Formation, Density Wave Model, Nebulae, Stellar Mass

Scientific paper

The sites of massive star formation in molecular clouds are investigated by comparing high-resolution radio surveys of molecular and ionized gas emission in the Milky Way. CO emission maps from the Massachusetts-Stony Brook survey of the first Galactic quadrant are used to locate, in l, b, and v, the molecular clouds associated with radio recombination-line H II regions. It is found that the radio H II regions are typically associated with giant molecular clouds (GMCs) with diameters of 20-60 pc and virial masses of 100,000 to a million solar masses. The radio H II regions appear preferentially concentrated toward the centers of the GMCs, contrary to the 'blister' picture of massive star formation on cloud surfaces.

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