The Second Survey of the Molecular Clouds in the Large Magellanic Cloud by NANTEN. II. Star Formation
A. Kawamura (1), Y. Mizuno (1), T. Minamidani (1,2), M. D. Fillipovic, (3), L. Staveley-Smith (4), S. Kim (5), N. Mizuno (1,6), T. Onishi (1,7), A., Mizuno (1), and Y. Fukui (1), (1. Nagoya University, 2. Hokkaido University,, 3. University of Western Sidney

TL;DR
This study classifies molecular clouds in the Large Magellanic Cloud into three types based on star formation activity, proposing an evolutionary sequence and estimating cloud lifetimes using observational data.
Contribution
It introduces a new classification scheme for GMCs based on star formation signatures and suggests an evolutionary progression among these types.
Findings
GMCs are classified into three types correlating with star formation activity.
The proposed evolutionary sequence estimates GMC lifetimes of 20-30 million years.
Type I GMCs are the youngest, with no massive star formation signatures.
Abstract
We studied star formation activities in the molecular clouds in the Large Magellanic Cloud. We have utilized the second catalog of 272 molecular clouds obtained by NANTEN to compare the cloud distribution with signatures of massive star formation including stellar clusters, and optical and radio HII regions. We find that the molecular clouds are classified into three types according to the activities of massive star formation; Type I shows no signature of massive star formation, Type II is associated with relatively small HII region(s) and Type III with both HII region(s) and young stellar cluster(s). The radio continuum sources were used to confirm that Type I GMCs do not host optically hidden HII regions. These signatures of massive star formation show a good spatial correlation with the molecular clouds in a sense they are located within ~100 pc of the molecular clouds. Among…
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