The RMS Survey: $^{13}$CO observations of candidate massive YSOs in the northern Galactic plane
J. S. Urquhart (1), A. L. Busfield (1), M. G. Hoare (1), S. L. Lumsden, (1), R. D. Oudmaijer (1), T. J. T. Moore (2), A. G. Gibb (3), C. R. Purcell, (4, 5), M. G. Burton (4), L. J. L. Mar\'echal (6), Z. Jiang (7), M. Wang, (7) ((1) University of Leeds (2)

TL;DR
This study uses 13CO molecular line observations from multiple telescopes to determine kinematic distances for a large sample of candidate massive young stellar objects in the northern Galactic plane, aiding in their identification and characterization.
Contribution
It provides the first extensive 13CO survey of RMS MYSO candidates, establishing a method to resolve multiple velocity components and derive unambiguous kinematic distances.
Findings
Detected 13CO emission towards 84% of observed sources.
Identified multiple molecular cloud components along lines of sight.
Derived kinematic distances for approximately 80% of sources with CO detection.
Abstract
Context: The Red MSX Source (RMS) survey is an ongoing multi-wavelength observational programme designed to return a large, high-resolution mid-infrared colour-selected sample of massive young stellar objects. Aims: A critical part of our follow-up programme is to conduct 13CO molecular line observations in order to determine kinematic distances to all of our MYSO candidates. These distances will allow us to identify and remove nearby low-mass YSOs and help in identifying evolved stars which are weak CO emitters. Method: We have used the 15 m James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT), the 13.7 m telescope of the Purple Mountain Observatory (PMO), the 20 m Onsala telescope and the 22m Mopra telescope to conduct molecular line observations towards 508 MYSOs candidates located in the 1st and 2nd Quadrants. Results: We detect 13CO emission towards 780 RMS sources which corresponds to…
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