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  4. The Giant Molecular Cloud G148.24+00.41: gas properties, kinematics, and cluster formation at the nexus of filamentary flows
 
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The Giant Molecular Cloud G148.24+00.41: gas properties, kinematics, and cluster formation at the nexus of filamentary flows

Source
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
ISSN
00358711
Date Issued
2024-02-01
Author(s)
Rawat, Vineet
Samal, M. R.
Walker, D. L.
Ojha, D. K.
Tej, A.
Zavagno, A.
Zhang, C. P.
Elia, Davide
Dutta, S.
Jose, J.
Eswaraiah, C.
Sharma, E.
DOI
10.1093/mnras/stae060
Volume
528
Issue
2
Abstract
Filamentary flows towards the centre of molecular clouds have been recognized as a crucial process in the formation and evolution of stellar clusters. In this paper, we present a comprehensive observational study that investigates the gas properties and kinematics of the Giant Molecular Cloud G148.24+00.41 using the observations of CO (1-0) isotopologues. We find that the cloud is massive (10<sup>5</sup> M<inf>☉</inf>) and is one of the most massive clouds of the outer Galaxy. We identified six likely velocity coherent filaments in the cloud having length, width, and mass in the range of 14–38 pc, 2.5–4.2 pc, and (1.3–6.9) × 10<sup>3</sup> M<inf>☉</inf>, respectively. We find that the filaments are converging towards the central area of the cloud, and the longitudinal accretion flows along the filaments are in the range of ∼ 26–264 M<inf>☉</inf> Myr<sup>−1</sup>. The cloud has fragmented into seven clumps having mass in the range of ∼ 260–2100 M<inf>☉</inf> and average size around ∼ 1.4 pc, out of which the most massive clump is located at the hub of the filamentary structures, near the geometric centre of the cloud. Three filaments are found to be directly connected to the massive clump and transferring matter at a rate of ∼ 675 M<inf>☉</inf> Myr<sup>−1</sup>. The clump hosts a near-infrared cluster. Our results show that large-scale filamentary accretion flows towards the central region of the collapsing cloud is an important mechanism for supplying the matter necessary to form the central high-mass clump and subsequent stellar cluster.
Publication link
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stae060
URI
https://d8.irins.org/handle/IITG2025/29055
Subjects
galaxies: star clusters: general | ISM: clouds | ISM: molecules | molecular data | stars: formation
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