Unusually Luminous Giant Molecular Clouds in the Outer Disk of M33
F. Bigiel, A. Bolatto, A. Leroy, L. Blitz, F. Walter, E. Rosolowsky,, L. Lopez, R. Plambeck

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution observations to analyze giant molecular clouds in the outer disk of M33, revealing environmental effects on their properties and a lower CO-to-H2 conversion factor compared to inner regions.
Contribution
First detailed comparison of outer and inner disk GMCs in M33, highlighting environmental impacts on molecular cloud properties and CO emission characteristics.
Findings
Outer disk GMCs follow size-linewidth relation but have higher CO luminosity for their virial mass.
The CO-to-H2 conversion factor is about half of the inner disk value.
Outer disk clouds are generally smaller than inner disk clouds in M33.
Abstract
We use high spatial resolution (~7pc) CARMA observations to derive detailed properties for 8 giant molecular clouds (GMCs) at a galactocentric radius corresponding to approximately two CO scale lengths, or ~0.5 optical radii (r25), in the Local Group spiral galaxy M33. At this radius, molecular gas fraction, dust-to-gas ratio and metallicity are much lower than in the inner part of M33 or in a typical spiral galaxy. This allows us to probe the impact of environment on GMC properties by comparing our measurements to previous data from the inner disk of M33, the Milky Way and other nearby galaxies. The outer disk clouds roughly fall on the size-linewidth relation defined by extragalactic GMCs, but are slightly displaced from the luminosity-virial mass relation in the sense of having high CO luminosity compared to the inferred virial mass. This implies a different CO-to-H2 conversion…
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