AzTEC 1.1 mm Observations of the MBM12 Molecular Cloud
M.J. Kim, S. Kim, S. Youn, M.S. Yun, G.W. Wilson, I. Aretxaga, J.P., Williams, D.H. Hughes, A. Humphrey, J.E. Austermann, T.A. Perera, P.D., Mauskopf, L. Magnani, and Y.-W. Kang

TL;DR
This paper reports the largest 1.1 mm survey of the MBM12 molecular cloud, detecting eight sources, including young stars, and discusses their spatial distribution, nature, and potential extragalactic origins.
Contribution
First large-area 1.1 mm survey of MBM12 with AzTEC, identifying eight significant sources and analyzing their properties and spatial distribution.
Findings
Eight secure 1.1 mm sources detected with high confidence.
Spatial anti-correlation between millimeter sources and infrared/CO emission.
Identification of two sources associated with classical T Tauri stars.
Abstract
We present 1.1 mm observations of the dust continuum emission from the MBM12 high-latitude molecular cloud observed with the Astronomical Thermal Emission Camera (AzTEC) mounted on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope on Mauna Kea, Hawaii. We surveyed a 6.34 deg centered on MBM12, making this the largest area that has ever been surveyed in this region with submillimeter and millimeter telescopes. Eight secure individual sources were detected with a signal-to-noise ratio of over 4.4. These eight AzTEC sources can be considered to be real astronomical objects compared to the other candidates based on calculations of the false detection rate. The distribution of the detected 1.1 mm sources or compact 1.1 mm peaks is spatially anti-correlated with that of the 100 micronm emission and the CO emission. We detected the 1.1 mm dust continuum emitting sources associated with two…
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