Molecular Gas Evolution across a Spiral Arm in M 51
Fumi Egusa, Jin Koda, Nick Scoville

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution CO observations of M 51 to analyze molecular gas structures, revealing that GMAs are smooth structures rather than GMC confusion, with star formation occurring in GMA cores downstream of spiral arms.
Contribution
It provides detailed GMC-scale insights into GMA structures and their evolution across spiral arms, highlighting the location of massive clumps and star-forming regions.
Findings
GMAs are likely smooth structures, not GMC confusion.
Most massive clumps are located downstream of spiral arms.
Star formation occurs in GMA cores near H II regions.
Abstract
We present sensitive and high angular resolution CO(1-0) data obtained by the Combined Array for Research in Millimeter-wave Astronomy (CARMA) observations toward the nearby grand-design spiral galaxy M 51. The angular resolution of 0.7" corresponds to 30 pc, which is similar to the typical size of Giant Molecular Clouds (GMCs), and the sensitivity is also high enough to detect typical GMCs. Within the 1' field of view centered on a spiral arm, a number of GMC-scale structures are detected as clumps. However, only a few clumps are found to be associated with each Giant Molecular Association (GMA), and more than 90% of the total flux is resolved out in our data. Considering the high sensitivity and resolution of our data, these results indicate that GMAs are not mere confusion of GMCs but plausibly smooth structures. In addition, we have found that the most massive clumps are located…
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