Submillimeter Line Emission from LMC N159W: a Dense, Clumpy PDR in a Low Metallicity Environment
J. L. Pineda, N. Mizuno, J. Stutzki, M. Cubick, M. Aravena, F. Bensch,, F. Bertoldi, L. Bronfman, K. Fujishita, U.U. Graf, M. Hitschfeld, N. Honingh,, H. Jakob, K. Jacobs, A. Kawamura, U. Klein, C. Kramer, J. May, M. Miller, Y., Mizuno, P. M\"uller, T. Onishi, V. Ossenkopf

TL;DR
This study investigates the physical and chemical properties of a dense, clumpy photodissociation region in the low-metallicity environment of the LMC N159W, using high-resolution submillimeter observations to understand star formation conditions.
Contribution
First detection of 13CO J=4-3 and [CI] lines in the LMC, and detailed modeling of the molecular gas properties in a low-metallicity star-forming region.
Findings
Gas temperature around 80 K
Gas density about 10^4 cm^-3
High C to CO abundance ratio
Abstract
Star formation at earlier cosmological times takes place in an interstellar medium with low metallicity. The Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) is ideally suited to study star formation in such an environment. The physical and chemical state of the ISM in a star forming environment can be constrained by observations of submm and FIR spectral lines of the main carbon carrying species, CO, CI and CII, which originate in the surface layers of molecular clouds illuminated by the UV radiation of the newly formed, young stars. We present high-angular resolution sub-millimeter observations in the N159W region in the LMC obtained with the NANTEN2 telescope of the 12CO J = 4-3, J = 7-6, and 13CO J = 4-3 rotational and [CI] 3P1-3P0 and 3P2-3P1 fine-structure transitions. The 13CO J =4-3 and [CI] 3P2-3P1 transitions are detected for the first time in the LMC. We derive the physical and chemical…
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