Abstract
We present spectral line images of [C I] 809 GHz, CO J = 1-0 115 GHz and H I 1.4 GHz line emission, and calculate the corresponding C, CO and H column densities, for a sinuous, quiescent giant molecular cloud about 5 kpc distant along the l = 328° sightline (hereafter G328) in our Galaxy. The [C I] data comes from the High Elevation Antarctic Terahertz telescope, a new facility on the summit of the Antarctic plateau where the precipitable water vapor falls to the lowest values found on the surface of the Earth. The CO and H I data sets come from the Mopra and Parkes/ATCA telescopes, respectively. We identify a filamentary molecular cloud, 75 × 5 pc long with mass 4 × 10 4 M and a narrow velocity emission range of just 4 km s-1. The morphology and kinematics of this filament are similar in CO, [C I], and H I, though in the latter appears as self-absorption. We calculate line fluxes and column densities for the three emitting species, which are broadly consistent with a photodissociation region model for a GMC exposed to the average interstellar radiation field. The [C/CO] abundance ratio averaged through the filament is found to be approximately unity. The G328 filament is constrained to be cold (T Dust < 20 K) by the lack of far-IR emission, to show no clear signs of star formation, and to only be mildly turbulent from the narrow line width. We suggest that it may represent a GMC shortly after formation, or perhaps still in the process of formation. © 2014. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. © 2014. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. Printed in the U.S.A.
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Burton, M. G., Ashley, M. C. B., Braiding, C., Storey, J. W. V., Kulesa, C., Hollenbach, D. J., … Rowell, G. (2014). The carbon inventory in a quiescent, filamentary molecular cloud in g328. Astrophysical Journal, 782(2). https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/782/2/72
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