Aligned Molecular Clouds towards SS433 and L=348.5 degrees; Possible Evidence for Galactic "Vapor Trail" Created by Relativistic Jet
H. Yamamoto, S. Ito, S. Ishigami, M. Fujishita, T. Kawase, A., Kawamura, N. Mizuno, T. Onishi, A. Mizuno, N. M. McClure-Griffiths, Y. Fukui

TL;DR
This study analyzes molecular clouds aligned with relativistic jets near SS433 and a similar region, suggesting jets may create molecular clouds over millions of years, revealing new insights into jet-ISM interactions.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis linking aligned molecular clouds to relativistic jets, proposing jet-ISM interaction as a formation mechanism for high-latitude molecular clouds.
Findings
Aligned molecular clouds are associated with SS433's jet axis.
Clouds have similar velocities and are located at high galactic latitudes.
The jet activity may last over 10^5-6 years, longer than previously estimated.
Abstract
We have carried out a detailed analysis of the NANTEN 12CO(J=1-0) dataset in two large areas of ~25 square degrees towards SS433 (l~40 degree) and of ~18 square degrees towards l~348.5 degree, respectively. We have discovered two groups of remarkably aligned molecular clouds at |b|~1--5 degree in the two regions. In SS433, we have detected 10 clouds in total, which are well aligned nearly along the axis of the X-ray jet emanating from SS433. These clouds have similar line-of-sight velocities of 42--56 km s^-1 and the total projected length of the feature is ~300 pc, three times larger than that of the X-ray jet, at a distance of 3 kpc. Towards l~348.5 degree, we have detected four clouds named as MJG348.5 at line-of-sight velocities of -80 -- -95 km s^-1 in V_LSR, which also show alignment nearly perpendicular to the Galactic plane. The total length of the feature is ~400 pc at a…
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