The molecular environment of the Galactic star forming region G19.61-0.23
G. Santangelo, L. Testi, S. Leurini, C.M. Walmsley, R. Cesaroni, L., Bronfman, S. Carey, L. Gregorini, K.M. Menten, S. Molinari, A., Noriega-Crespo, L. Olmi, F. Schuller

TL;DR
This study uses multi-wavelength (sub)millimeter and infrared observations to analyze the large-scale and small-scale molecular gas properties of the Galactic star-forming region G19.61-0.23, comparing it with extragalactic molecular clouds.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison of the physical conditions of molecular clouds in G19.61-0.23 with those in nearby galaxies, highlighting similarities and differences.
Findings
Virial parameter varies widely among clumps, indicating different stability states.
Most ATLASGAL sources are associated with luminous MIPSGAL counterparts, suggesting massive star formation.
G19.61-0.23's GMC has properties typical of Galactic clouds but differs from extragalactic counterparts.
Abstract
We present single-dish (sub)millimeter observations of gas and dust in the Galactic high-mass star-forming region G19.61-0.23, with the aim of studying the large-scale properties and physical conditions of the molecular gas across the region. The final aim is to compare the large-scale (about 100 pc) properties with the small-scale (about 3 pc) properties and to consider possible implications for extragalactic studies. We have mapped CO isotopologues in the J=1-0 transition using the FCRAO-14m telescope and the J=2-1 transition using the IRAM-30m telescope. We have also used data from the ATLASGAL survey and from the BU-FCRAO Galactic Ring Survey, as well as the Spitzer infrared Galactic plane surveys GLIMPSE and MIPSGAL to characterize the star-formation activity within the molecular clouds. We reveal a population of molecular clumps in the 13CO(1-0) emission. Our analysis of the 13CO…
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