Physical and chemical conditions in methanol maser selected hot-cores and UCHII regions
C. R. Purcell, S. N. Longmore, M. G. Burton, A. J. Walsh, V. Minier,, M. R. Cunningham, R. Balasubramanyam

TL;DR
This study investigates the physical and chemical properties of star-forming regions associated with methanol masers, revealing differences linked to evolutionary stages and suggesting molecular markers for star formation progression.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive spectral line survey of methanol maser regions, identifying chemical and physical variations that serve as potential evolutionary indicators.
Findings
CH3OH brightness correlates with UCHII regions and CH3CN presence.
Massive clumps evolve rapidly, showing early UCHII or Hyper-Compact HII regions.
Gas-mass to luminosity ratio follows a shallower relation than expected for massive stars.
Abstract
We present the results of a targeted 3-mm spectral line survey towards the eighty-three 6.67 GHz methanol maser selected star forming clumps observed by Purcell et al. 2006. In addition to the previously reported measurements of HCO+ (1 - 0), H13CO+ (1 - 0), and CH3CN (5 - 4) & (6 -5), we used the Mopra antenna to detect emission lines of N2H+ (1 - 0), HCN (1 - 0) and HNC (1 - 0) towards 82/83 clumps (99 per cent), and CH3OH (2 - 1) towards 78/83 clumps (94 per cent). The molecular line data have been used to derive virial and LTE masses, rotational temperatures and chemical abundances in the clumps, and these properties have been compared between sub-samples associated with different indicators of evolution. The greatest differences are found between clumps associated with 8.6 GHz radio emission, indicating the presence of an Ultra-Compact HII region, and `isolated' masers (without…
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