Star-forming Cloud Complexes in the Central Molecular Zone of NGC 253
Kazushi Sakamoto, Rui-Qing Mao, Satoki Matsushita, Alison B. Peck,, Tsuyoshi Sawada, and Martina C. Wiedner

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution molecular gas and dust observations to identify and analyze dense star-forming cloud complexes in the nucleus of NGC 253, revealing similarities and differences with the Milky Way's center.
Contribution
It provides detailed characterization of molecular cloud complexes in NGC 253's starburst nucleus at 20-40 pc resolution, highlighting their properties and comparison with Galactic center clouds.
Findings
Dense gas clumps contribute one third of CO emission in the central 300 pc.
Cloud complexes have high temperatures, densities, and dense gas fractions.
NGC 253's CMZ is similar to the Milky Way's but with higher temperatures and densities.
Abstract
We report 350 and 230 GHz observations of molecular gas and dust in the starburst nucleus of NGC 253 at 20-40 pc (1"-2") resolution. The data contain CO(3-2), HCN(4-3), CO(2-1), 13CO(2-1), C18O(2-1), and continuum at 0.87 mm and 1.3 mm toward the central kiloparsec. The CO(2-1) size of the galaxy's central molecular zone (CMZ) is measured to be about 300 pc x 100 pc at the half maximum of intensity. Five clumps of dense and warm gas stand out in the CMZ at arcsecond resolution, and they are associated with compact radio sources due to recent massive star formation. They contribute one third of the CO emission in the central 300 pc and have 12CO peak brightness temperatures around 50 K, molecular gas column densities on the order of 10^{4} Msun pc^{-2}, gas masses on the order of 10^{7} Msun in the size scale of 20 pc, volume-averaged gas densities of n(H2) ~ 4000 cm^{-3}, and high…
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