Abundances and Isotope Ratios in the Magellanic Clouds: The Star Forming Environment of N113
M. Wang, Y.-N. Chin, C. Henkel, J. B. Whiteoak, M. Cunningham

TL;DR
This study presents a detailed spectral line survey of the star forming region N113 in the Large Magellanic Cloud, revealing molecular abundances, isotope ratios, and physical conditions, highlighting differences from Galactic environments and implications for galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive molecular line survey of N113, including isotope ratios and physical conditions, enhancing understanding of star formation in low-metallicity environments.
Findings
Molecular abundances consistent with a nitrogen-deficient PDR
Densities range from 5x10^3 to 10^6 cm^-3
Isotope ratios differ from those in the Galaxy
Abstract
With the goal of deriving the physical and chemical conditions of star forming regions in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), a spectral line survey of the prominent star forming region N113 is presented. The observations cover parts of the frequency range from 85 GHz to 357 GHz and include 63 molecular transitions from a total of 16 species, among them spectra of rare isotopologues. Maps of selected molecular lines as well as the 1.2 mm continuum distribution are also presented. Molecular abundances in the core of the complex are found to be consistent with a photon dominated region (PDR) that is nitrogen deficient, with the potential exception of N2H+. Densities range from 5x10^3 cm-3 for CO to almost 10^6 for CS and HCN, indicating that only the densest regions provide sufficient shielding even for some of the most common species. An ortho- to para-H_2CO ratio of ~3 hints at H_2CO…
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