A Bubbling Nearby Molecular Cloud: COMPLETE Shells in Perseus
Hector G. Arce, Michelle A. Borkin, Alyssa A. Goodman, Jaime E. Pineda, and Christopher N. Beaumont

TL;DR
This study identifies and characterizes 12 shells in the Perseus molecular cloud, suggesting they are formed by stellar winds from young stars, and demonstrates that these winds can sustain the cloud's turbulence.
Contribution
First detailed mapping of shells in Perseus using COMPLETE survey data, linking them to stellar winds and their role in cloud turbulence.
Findings
12 shells identified with sizes 0.1 to 3 pc
Stellar winds can supply enough energy to sustain turbulence
Most shells are associated with low to intermediate mass stars
Abstract
We present a study on the shells (and bubbles) in the Perseus molecular cloud using the COMPLETE survey large-scale 12CO(1-0) and 13CO(1-0) maps. The twelve shells reported here are spread throughout most of the Perseus cloud and have circular or arc-like morphologies with a range in radius of about 0.1 to 3 pc. Most of them have not been detected before most likely as maps of the region lacked the coverage and resolution needed to distinguish them. The majority of the shells are coincident with infrared nebulosity of similar shape and have a candidate powering source near the center. We suggest they are formed by the interaction of spherical or very wide-angle winds powered by young stars inside or near the Perseus molecular cloud -a cloud that is commonly considered to be mostly forming low-mass stars. Two of the twelve shells are powered by high-mass stars close to the cloud, while…
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