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TWO MOLECULAR CLOUDS WITH ANOMALOUS VELOCITIES IN THE GALACTIC ANTICENTER

  • Received : 2014.11.14
  • Accepted : 2014.12.08
  • Published : 2014.12.31

Abstract

We map two molecular clouds located in the exact anticenter region emitting in the (J = 1-0) transition of $^{12}CO$ and $^{13}CO$ using the 3-mm SIS mixer receiver on the 14-m radio telescope at Taeduk Radio Astronomy Observatory. The target clouds with anomalous velocities of $V_{LSR}{\sim}-20km\;s^{-1}$ are distinguished from other clouds in this direction. In addition, they are located in the interarm region between the Orion Arm and the Perseus Arm. Sizes of the clouds are estimated to be about 8.6 and 10.8 pc, respectively. The total mass is estimated to be about $4{\times}10^3$ $M_{\odot}$ using CO luminosity of the clouds. Several cores are detected, but no sign of star formation is found according to the IRAS point sources. Their larger linewidths, anomalous velocities, and their location at the interarm region make these clouds more distinguished, though their physical properties are similar to the dark clouds in the solar neighborhood in terms of mass and size.

Keywords

1. INTRODUCTION

The Galactic anticenter region of (l, b) = (178.°0 − 186°. 0, 3.°5 − 6.°0) was previously mapped on a 3′- grid in the transition of 12CO (J = 1 − 0) line using the 14-m radio telescope at Taeduk Radio Astronomy Observatory (Lee et al. 1999; Paper I). They identified two molecular clouds with anomalous velocities of about VLSR = −20 km s−1. Toward the exact Galactic anticenter region (l = 180°), the LSR velocity is presumably expected to be around VLSR = 0 km s−1. The velocity of VLSR = −20 km s−1 seems to be quite peculiar for the cloud in this exact anticenter region, even considering a possible streaming motion of 7 km s−1 (Blitz 1991) in the spiral arm. This motivated us to undertake more detailed study on the physical conditions for these molecular clouds with peculiar velocity.

In order to study the physical properties of a molecular cloud, distance information is essential. In fact, Kim et al. (2000) conducted deep CCD observations in V band to obtain stellar density distribution and to determine the distances to these two molecular clouds. Star count method based on the linear programming technique was applied to the CCD photometric data. They found that the two molecular clouds are located almost at the same distance of about 1.1 ± 0.1 kpc, and the peak extinction caused by the clouds was estimated to be ∼ 2.2 ± 0.3 mag in V band.

In this paper we have mapped these clouds with a higher sampling rate of 1′ for further study of the distribution and physical condition of molecular gas. Observational mode is described in Section 2. We present our results along with physical properties of the clouds in Section 3. In Section 4 we delineate the some highlights of the observational results as well as discussion. We summarize our results in the final section.

 

2. OBSERVATIONS

We have mapped about 1 deg2 section of (l, b) = (179°.8 − 181°.0, 5°.0 − 6°.0), where the clouds with anomalous velocity are residing, in the (J = 1−0) transitions of 12CO and 13CO using the 3-mm SIS mixer receiver on the Taeduk Radio Astronomy Observatory (TRAO) 14-m radio telescope. The beam size (FWHM) is about 50′′ and the grid spacing of the new map is 1′. We used a 250 KHz filterbank, which covers a velocity range of 170 km s−1 with a resolution of 0.65 km s−1 at 12CO (J = 1 − 0). The filterbanks were centered at VLSR = 0 km s−1 for all observations. Scale of the target region is about 2 deg by 1.5 degree, and only the clouds with anomalous velocity were observed on 1′- grid. The rest of the data was taken from the previous observations onto 3′-grid (Paper I).

All observations were conducted by position switching between mapping positions and reference positions which were carefully selected to be free of CO emission. Each reference observation was shared with observations at 2 to 4 mapping positions depending on the sky stability. Calibration was accomplished by frequently observing an ambient temperature load. All antenna temperatures quoted are corrected for atmospheric extinction and for the forward spillover and scattering losses of the antenna and radome (ηfss = 0.63 at 115 GHz), and are therefore on the temperature scale defined by Kutner & Ulich (1981). The system tempera-ture corrected for the atmosphere varied typically from 400 to 600 K at 13CO (J = 1−0), and from 700 to 900 K at 12CO (J = 1 − 0) depending on the elevation and the weather condition.

All spectra were examined visually both before and after fitting the baseline, linear or polynomial. Some of spectra were reobserved and replaced when their quality was significantly low. The collected spectra were transformed into IRAF data format using modified FCRAO task package, which was developed at Five College Radio Astronomy Observatory. Most of the subsequent analysis was done within IRAF using this package. The average rms noise of the data is estimated to be σrms ∼ 0.2 K for 12CO (J = 1− 0) in at a velocity resolution of 0.65 km s−1, and σrms ∼ 0.1 K for 13CO (J = 1− 0) in at a velocity resolution of 0.68 km s−1.

 

3. RESULTS

3.1. CO Emission

total number of about 2,200 spectra was obtained in the 12CO (J = 1 − 0), and about 900 spectra were obtained in the 13CO (J = 1 − 0) for the strong 12CO emission region. We resampled the previously observed region with 3′-grid spacing onto 1′-grid spacing; thus, the map other than newly observed region was substantially undersampled. However, we consider the rest part other than the target clouds could be ignored in this study, as we are only interested in those two molecular clouds with peculiar velocity. The mapped region covers the entire extent of the two clouds with anomalous velocities in the 12CO (J = 1 − 0). The 13CO (J = 1−0) observations were focused only on the strong emission region of 12CO (J = 1 − 0), as only brighter 12CO (J = 1−0) emission region can produce the 13CO emission enough to to detected.

The spectral intensity maps integrated from VLSR = −25 to −15 km s−1 are presented in Figures 1 and 2. Two clouds have clear boundaries and are composed of several clumps and some elongated structures. These two clouds can be handled separately, as Cloud A and Cloud B; Cloud A is in the right side of the mapped region centered on (l, b) = (180°, 5°.2), and Cloud B is in the left side centered on (180°.8, 5°.6), respectivley.

Figure 1.The 12CO integrated intensity map of anomalous velcity range of VLSR = −30 to −10 km s −1. The first contour and its increment are 2 K km s −1. Grey scale ranges from 2 to 14 K km s −1. Cloud A is located at righthand side, and Cloud B is at lefthand side.

Figure 2.The 13CO integrated intensity map of anomalous velcity range of VLSR = −30 to −10 km s −1. The first contour is 1 K km s−1 and its increment is 0.5 K km s−1. Grey scale ranges from 1 to 2.5 K km s−1.

Another set of 12CO (J = 1 − 0) intensity maps integrated from −10 to 0 km s−1, and 0 to +10 km s−1 are presented in Figures 3 and 4, respectively. The morphologies of the clouds are somewhat clumpy and very similar to dark clouds in the solar neighborhood. One clump is associated with IRAS point source 06048+3123 at (l, b) = (180°.31, 5°.42). A probable young stellar object is residing at the center, which is associated with a dense core and IRAS point source 06048+3123. A single-point observation was conducted by Wouterloot et al. (1989/2000) toward this point source IRAS 06048+3123. They found that VLSR = −5:24 km s−1, and 12CO (J = 1−0) peak temperature of 10.8 K in the unit of . FIR luminosity of the IRAS point source is hard to be estimated as its distance is not known. From 2MASS data around this IRAS point source, there are many embedded stars which are reddened at least 2 magnitude in K band. From the difference in VLSR , it is clear that this point source is not related to our target objects with anomalous velocities.

Figure 3.The 12CO integrated intensity map of VLSR = −10 to 0 km s−1. The first contour and its increment are 2 K km s−1. Grey scale ranges from 2 to 14 K km s−1.

Figure 4.The 12CO integrated intensity map of VLSR = 0 to 10 km s−1. The first contour and its increment are 2 K km s−1. Grey scale ranges from 2 to 14 K km s−1.

Position-velocity maps integrated along longitude and latitude are shown in Figures 5 and 6. Two maps show three discrete velocity ranges of the molecular gas; −25 to −15 km s−1, −10 to 0 km s−1, and 0 to +10 km s−1. The last two are within the range of possible streaming motion (Blitz 1991), and some of them are thought to be local. On the other hand, gas components with the velocity range of −25 to −15 km s−1 seems to be very anomalous in this direction. We will discuss this issue in the next section.

Figure 5.Galactic latitude-velocity integrated intensity map of the target region. The lowest contour level is 14 K arcmin and the increment between levels is 10 K arcmin.

Figure 6.Galactic longitude-velocity integrated intensity map of the target region. The lowest contour level and the increment between levels are 8 K arcmin.

3.2. Velocity Field

Channel maps of the cloud at individual velocities are shown in Figure 7. For each channel map, two velocity channels of spectrometer were binned into one panel (thus, 1.3 km s−1 per panel) and the velocity range covered is −27.0 to −12.7 km s−1. These maps clearly show the filamentary structure and partial clumpiness of the molecular gas. We intentionally present the channel map without any smoothing to show the cloud structure more realistically. However, the channel shows no specific dynamic status of the gas within. In fact, the velocity field itself is very similar to other dark clouds in the solar neighborhood, though they have broader linewiths(see next section).

Figure 7.The 12CO chanel map. For each channel map, two velocity channels of the spectrometer are binned together, thus velocity step is 1.3 km s−1. The grey scale range is from 0.4 to 8 K km s−1 and the lowest contour is 1 K km s−1, and the increment 2 K km s−1.

Figures 8 and 9 represents 12CO (J = 1−0) linewidth and mean velocity maps of the target cloud, respectively. The mean velocity of the lower part (Cloud A) is around −20.5 km s−1 and that of the upper part (Cloud B) is −20.0 km s−1. For the mean velocity and linewidth maps, we used a threshold-cutoff only for the meaningful region larger than the 3σ of the 12CO (J = 1 − 0) integrated intensity of the cloud.

Figure 8.Mean velocity map above a threshold larger than 3σ CO integrated intensity. Contour level is starting from 2.8 km s−1 and its increment is 0.1 km s−1, and grey scale is ranging from 0 to 5 km s−1.

Figure 9.Linewidth map above a threshold larger than 3σ CO integrated intensity. Contour level is starting from 1.6 km s−1 and its increment is 0.12 km s−1, and grey scale is ranging from 1.5 to 4 km s−1.

The mean velocity map shows that the velocity at the position (l, b) = (180°.8, 5°.85) is quite different from those of other parts in Cloud A and B; the mean velocity of the former is more redshifted than that of the remaining part. It is noticeable that the linewidths at that postion is significantly broader than those of the rest of Cloud B.

3.3. Physical Parameters

To derive physical parameters of a cloud, we firstly need to estimate linewidths and luminosities along with distance information. Distance to this cloud was established by Kim et al. (2000) as 1.1 kpc. With this distance, the cloud area is estimated to be about 1.1 pc2 above a 3σ rms level of 12CO (J = 1 − 0) integrated intensity. We estimated the 12CO (J = 1− 0) luminosity to be ∼1,100 K km s−1pc2, and 13CO (J = 1 − 0) luminosity, ∼110 K km s−1pc2 (see Table 1).

There are several ways to determine the linewidth of a cloud, and these have been discussed well in other papers (Lee 1994; Carpenter et al. 1993). We decompose the gas motions within each molecular cloud into two terms, prior to deriving the linewidths. These two independent motions have been discussed in Dickman & Kleiner (1985), and in Lee et al. (1990). They represent two measurable motions within clouds: the first is an ‘internal velocity dispersion’ , which represents the spread of velocities observed along the j-th line of sight (LOS); and the second is a ‘centroid velocity dispersion’ (σc), which is associated with the point-to-point bulk motions of the gas appearing in the cloud map - the square of this centroid velocity dispersion is simply defined to be the ensemble variance of the observed LOS centroid (i.e., LOS average) velocities.

hus, the total velocity dispersion of a cloud can be represented as The cloud linewidth (FWHM) can be determined from: σtot assuming a Gaussian profile. We used 12CO data for estimating linewidths in Table 1. If we assume that a cloud has a spherical shape with a uniform density distribution, and that the turbulence is the main agent supporting the cloud against self-gravity, then we may estimate its virial mass using the equation:

Table 1a Linewidth is estimated using 12CO b Virial mass is estimated using Equation 2 c Unit is [K km s−1 pc2

where D is the diameter of a cloud assuming a spherical cloud in units of pc. The viral mass can also be obtained from the linewidth of the entire cloud (MacLaren et al. 1988) as:

where r is radius of the cloud assuming a spherical shape in units of pc, and ΔV is the line width of the whole cloud in units of km s−1. If, instead, we assume that each cloud has a spherical r−1 density distribution, the corresponding virial mass will be 25% larger than that given by equation 1 (Lee 1994; Lee & Jung 2003). We use equation 2 for estimating virial masses of the clouds. One general method for estimating cloud masses is to use the relationship between the CO integrated intensity and the molecular hydrogen column density, or equivalently that between CO luminosity (LCO) and gas mass (MCO). In fact, this method is favorable when a cloud is not gravitationally bound and thus virial mass estimate is not plausible, and LTE assumption is not applicable. The proportionality constant X, a conversion factor from CO luminosity (or integrated intensity) is used to estimate gas mass (or column density); it is implicitly assumed that such a factor has general applicability. We have used an estimate of this conversion factor: X = 2.3 × 1020 cm−2 (K km s−1)−1 (Bloemen 1989) this value was established through a γ-ray analysis. The fact that 13CO emission is much weaker than expected in some portions of the clouds drive us to use only 12CO data for estimating physical parameters of the clouds. The derived physical parameters of the two clouds are tabulated in Table 1.

 

4. SOME HIGHLIGHTS AND DISCUSSION

Below we present some observational highlights and related discussion

1. Our target clouds reside in the interarm region between the Orion and Perseus Arms since their distances are about 1.1 kpc (Kim et al. 2000). To the Galactic anticenter direction, there is GEM OB1 association, the distance of which is 2 kpc (Carpenter et al. 1994), at the exact center of Perseus Arm. Instellar environment of the clouds in the interarm region could be quite different; weaker interstellar field, less abundance etc. As seen from Figures 5 and 6, the CO emission of the target clouds is confined to the velocity range from −25 to −15 km s−1. This implies that these clouds are running away from the Orion Arm towards the Perseus Arm, and located exactly in the middle of two arms. So far no other molecular clouds have been reported in this region. Gas clouds detached from the spiral arm may be caused by some ejection mechanism, such as supernova. Recently, Matsunaga et al. (2001) reported several molecular supershells in their NANTEN survey of the Galactic Plane. In fact, explosive phenomena could occur at any part of the spiral arms, and leave imprints of their activities. To clarify this phenomenon in the Galactic anticenter region, a more systematic survey with higher sensitivity for large area is required.

2. Comparing with other velocity components of the mapped region (−10 to 0 km s−1 and 0 to 10 km s−1), the linewidths of the target clouds are broader (ΔV = 3.6 to 3.9 km s−1; see Table 1). Linewidths of the other velocity ranges are 1 to 2.5 km s−1. In fact, they are somewhat broader than those of the normal dark clouds in the solar neighborhood without any internal heating source (ΔV = 1 ∼ 2 km s−1). This fact implies that there may have been some ejecting and disrupting mechanism, as mentioned above, which gave rise to negative LOS velocity of −20 km s−1 and broader linewidth.

3. The virial mass estimate of two target clouds are much larger than the masses from CO luminosity. Because of the broader linewidths, their virial masses are sustantially overestimated. Thus, we use CO luminosity to estimate their masses, which are 1,900 and 2,100 solar masses (see Table 1). The mass estimate of the target clouds indicates that the cloud masses are near the upper limit of those of the dark clouds in the solar neighborhood. The weaker emission feature of 13CO of the target clouds remaines fto be studied further with more sensitive observations.

4. As seen from Figure 8, there seems to be no systematic variation of the velocity field within the clouds, except a small area in Cloud B. Channel map(Figure 7) also shows that there is no significant change in their morphology. These facts indicate that there is no systematic motion within the clouds. The two clouds show only a systematic receding motion, away from the Orion Arm.

5. From Figure 9 of Paper I, the distribution of Hi emission of the Weaver and Williams (1973)database is found to be in a very small dynamic range within a factor of 1.3. We have also checked the more recent Hi data from Hartmann et al. (1997), and found no significant change. Thus the atomic hydrogen contribution to the FIR emission will not be significant when compared with the CO emission and FIR dust emission. Hence we did not include the H I contribution. The CO emission is, in general, well matched with the FIR emission region at 100 μm, when there is less foreground and background stray dust emission, thus the dust emission is all correlated with molecular clouds associated. As the target clouds are located just above the Galacic Plane, the foreground and backgrond dust emission are stirred in regular fashion except for the one IRAS point source (Figure 10). Thus FIR emission and the 12CO integrated intensity relationship could not be established in directions toward the target clouds, except that highest-possible value of I100/ICO is ∼0.38 (K km s−1)/(MJy sr−1) after subtracting minimum background emission. This value is very close to those of normal dark clouds (Lee & Lee 2005).

Figure 10.The IRAS 100 micron image and the 3σ and 10σ contours of 12CO integrated intensity(in solid line) of the anomalous clouds. Overlayed dotted line is for the other clouds in the velocity range of −10 to +10 km s −1.

 

5. SUMMARY

We have observed around 1 deg2 section of (l, b) = (180°.0 − 181°.0, 5°.0 − 6°.0) in the (J = 1 − 0) transitions of 12CO and 13CO using the 3-mm SIS mixer receiver on the Taeduk Radio Astronomy Observatory (TRAO) on a 1′-grid. The mapped region covers the enire extent of the two clouds with anomalous velocities, which were identified in the previous Galactic anticenter CO survey (Paper I). The 13CO (J = 1 − 0) observations were focused only on the strong emission region of 12CO (J = 1−0). The results of the observations are presented in the form of integrated intensity maps, position-velocity maps, and channel maps. The integrated intensity map shows that the target clouds are well isolated from other clouds. We identified two sub-clouds, named A and B, and derived their physical parameters separately. These two clouds have similar characteristics. The radial velocity of the mapped region is found to fall in three velocity ranges of VLSR = −25 to −15 km s−1, −10 to 0 km s−1 and 0 to 10 km s−1. The position-velocity maps shows that there is no systematic change in the centroid velocity and mean velocity widths within the clouds. In an overall sense, the characteristic of the CO emissions from the clouds does not show any significant differences from those of dark clouds in the solar neighborhood in terms of basic physical parameters, such as temperature, mass and morphology. However, broader linewidth compared with those of solar neighborhood dark clouds, and location in the interarm region makes them distinguished objects. Further study toward a larger area including these clouds may clarify the possible ejection mechanism in more detail.

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