4.7 Article

THE PdBI ARCSECOND WHIRLPOOL SURVEY (PAWS): ENVIRONMENTAL DEPENDENCE OF GIANT MOLECULAR CLOUD PROPERTIES IN M51

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 784, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/784/1/3

Keywords

evolution; galaxies: individual (M51, NGC 5194); galaxies: spiral; galaxies: star formation; ISM: clouds; ISM: structure

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) [SCHI 536/5-1, SCHI 536/7-1, SPP 1573]
  2. European Research Council
  3. NASA [NNX10AD01G]
  4. French Agence Nationale de la Recherche as part of the SCHISM project [ANR-09-BLAN-0231-01]
  5. NSF [1066293]
  6. Junta de Andalucia grant [P08 TIC 03531]

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Using data from the PdBI Arcsecond Whirlpool Survey (PAWS), we have generated the largest extragalactic giant molecular cloud (GMC) catalog to date, containing 1507 individual objects. GMCs in the inner M51 disk account for only 54% of the total (CO)-C-12(1-0) luminosity of the survey, but on average they exhibit physical properties similar to Galactic GMCs. We do not find a strong correlation between the GMC size and velocity dispersion, and a simple virial analysis suggests that similar to 30% of GMCs in M51 are unbound. We have analyzed the GMC properties within seven dynamically motivated galactic environments, finding that GMCs in the spiral arms and in the central region are brighter and have higher velocity dispersions than inter-arm clouds. Globally, the GMC mass distribution does not follow a simple power-law shape. Instead, we find that the shape of the mass distribution varies with galactic environment: the distribution is steeper in inter-arm region than in the spiral arms, and exhibits a sharp truncation at high masses for the nuclear bar region. We propose that the observed environmental variations in the GMC properties and mass distributions are a consequence of the combined action of large-scale dynamical processes and feedback from high-mass star formation. We describe some challenges of using existing GMC identification techniques for decomposing the (CO)-C-12(M51's1-0) emission in molecule-rich environments, such as M51's inner disk.

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