13CO(J=1-0) On-the-fly Mapping of the Giant HII Region NGC 604: Variation in Molecular Gas Density and Temperature due to Sequential Star Formation
Kazuyuki Muraoka, Tomoka Tosaki, Rie Miura, Sachiko Onodera, Nario, Kuno, Kouichiro Nakanishi, Hiroyuki Kaneko, and Shinya Komugi

TL;DR
This study uses 13CO and 12CO line observations to analyze molecular gas density and temperature variations across GMCs in NGC 604, revealing effects of sequential star formation and localized heating by OB stars.
Contribution
First detailed molecular gas density and temperature measurements across GMCs in NGC 604, linking star formation activity to gas physical conditions.
Findings
Dense molecular gas exists throughout GMC-B, exceeding 10^3 cm^-3.
Kinetic temperature varies, being higher at the GMC peak due to localized heating.
Gas properties are influenced by the distribution of OB stars and star formation activity.
Abstract
We present 13CO(J=1-0) line emission observations with the Nobeyama 45-m telescope toward the giant HII region NGC 604 in the spiral galaxy M 33. We detected 13CO(J=1-0) line emission in 3 major giant molecular clouds (GMCs) labeled as GMC-A, B, and C beginning at the north. We derived two line intensity ratios, 13CO(J=1-0)/12CO(J =1-0), R13/12, and 12CO(J=3-2)/12CO(J =1-0), R31, for each GMC at an angular resolution of 25" (100 pc). Averaged values of R13/12 and R31 are 0.06 and 0.31 within the whole GMC-A, 0.11 and 0.67 within the whole GMC-B, and 0.05 and 0.36 within the whole GMC-C, respectively. In addition, we obtained R13/12=0.09\pm0.02 and R31=0.76\pm0.06 at the 12CO(J=1-0) peak position of the GMC-B. Under the Large Velocity Gradient approximation, we determined gas density of 2.8 \times10^3 cm^-3 and kinetic temperature of 33+9-5 K at the 12CO(J=1-0) peak position of the…
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