Constraining the properties of 1.2-mm dust clumps that contain luminous water masers
Shari Breen, Simon Ellingsen

TL;DR
This study conducted a sensitive survey of water masers in 1.2-mm dust clumps, revealing their association with larger, brighter, and more evolved clumps, and suggesting water masers appear earlier in star formation than methanol masers.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive, less biased analysis of water maser occurrence in dust clumps, refining models of maser presence and evolutionary stages in star-forming regions.
Findings
44% detection rate of water masers in dust clumps
Water masers are associated with larger, brighter, more massive clumps
Water masers can appear before methanol masers in evolution
Abstract
We have conducted a sensitive water maser search with the ATCA towards 267 1.2-mm dust clumps presented in the literature. We combine our new observations with previous water maser observations to extend our sample to 294 1.2-mm dust clumps, towards which we detect 165 distinct water maser sites towards 128 1.2-mm dust clumps. Within the fields of our observations, we additionally find four water masers with no apparent associated 1.2-mm dust continuum emission. Our overall detection rate of 44 per cent appears to vary as a function of Galactic longitude. We find that there is an excellent correspondence between the locations of the detected water masers with the peak of the target 1.2-mm dust clump sources. As expected from previous similar studies, the water masers are chiefly detected towards the bigger, brighter and more massive 1.2-mm dust clumps. We find further evidence that the…
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