W43: the closest molecular complex of the Galactic Bar?
Q. Nguyen Luong, F. Motte, F. Schuller, N. Schneider, S. Bontemps, P., Schilke, K. M. Menten, F. Heitsch, F. Wyrowski, P. Carlhoff, L. Bronfman, and, T. Henning

TL;DR
This study identifies W43 as a massive, coherent molecular complex near the Galactic Bar, with detailed analysis of its structure, mass, and star formation activity suggesting it may evolve into a starburst region.
Contribution
It provides a detailed 3D analysis of W43, revealing its size, mass, and potential as a starburst cluster formation site, highlighting its unique position at the Galactic Bar.
Findings
W43 is a large (~140 pc) molecular complex with a surrounding atomic envelope (~290 pc).
Total mass of W43 is approximately 7.1 million solar masses.
Star formation rate is increasing, indicating potential for future starburst activity.
Abstract
We used a large database extracted from Galaxy-wide surveys of H {\scriptsize I}, CO 1-0, and continuum to trace diffuse atomic gas, low- to medium-density molecular gas, high-density molecular gas, and star formation activity which we complemented by dedicated CO 2--1, 3--2 observations of the W43 region. From the detailed 3D (space-space-velocity) analysis of the molecular and atomic cloud tracers through the region and despite its wide velocity range (\emph{FWHM} around ), we identified W43 as a large (equivalent diameter pc) and coherent complex of molecular clouds which is surrounded by an atomic gas envelope (equivalent diameter pc). We measured the total mass of this newly-identified molecular complex (), the mass contained in dense $870…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
