4.5 Review Book Chapter

Molecular Clouds in Nearby Galaxies

Journal

Publisher

ANNUAL REVIEWS
DOI: 10.1146/annurev-astro-081309-130854

Keywords

galaxies: ISM; galaxies: evolution; galaxies: Local Group; galaxies: Magellanic Clouds; star formation

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We present a review of spatially resolved giant molecular clouds (GMCs) in nearby galaxies, aiming at providing a template of GMC properties, which may be extrapolated to distant galaxies. We focus on the Magellanic system including the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds (LAIC, SMC), M33, and a few dwarfs as observed in the y = 1-0 (CO)-C-12 transition at 2.6-mm wavelength. The X factor, a conversion factor of the (CO)-C-12 intensity to total molecular column density, and the GMC mass distribution, dN/dM, are similar among these galaxies, suggesting that GMCs share similar properties in the Local Group. The GMCs are classified into three types according to their level of star-formation activity and the types are interpreted in terms of evolution in 20-30 Myr rather than as three different generic types. A three-dimensional comparison including the velocity axis has revealed that GMCs in the LMC are associated with HI envelopes. The HI envelopes are probably gravitationally bound and may be infalling to increase the GMC mass via H1-H-2 conversion. Recent submillimeter observations are revealing dense and warm dumps in GMCs, suggesting that the interior of a GMC also follows contraction leading to star formation on a similar timescale. Finally, we present an attempt to place these GMC properties among more distant galaxies and discuss future observational prospects.

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