The JCMT 12CO(3-2) Survey of the Cygnus X Region: I. A Pathfinder
M. Gottschalk, R. Kothes, H.E. Matthews, T.L. Landecker, W.R.F. Dent

TL;DR
This study demonstrates the feasibility of a high-resolution CO survey of the Cygnus X region, revealing complex molecular structures and star formation activity, and introduces a Pathfinder for future comprehensive mapping.
Contribution
It presents the first high-resolution 12CO(3-2) survey of part of Cygnus X, establishing the feasibility of a full survey and identifying new molecular outflows and star formation features.
Findings
Detected three layers of CO emission related to different distance components.
Identified 47 molecular outflows, including 27 new discoveries.
Demonstrated the correlation between HI self-absorption and CO emission in the region.
Abstract
Cygnus X is one of the most complex areas in the sky. This complicates interpretation, but also creates the opportunity to investigate accretion into molecular clouds and many subsequent stages of star formation, all within one small field of view. Understanding large complexes like Cygnus X is the key to understanding the dominant role that massive star complexes play in galaxies across the Universe. The main goal of this study is to establish feasibility of a high-resolution CO survey of the entire Cygnus X region by observing part of it as a Pathfinder, and to evaluate the survey as a tool for investigating the star-formation process. A 2x4 degree area of the Cygnus X region has been mapped in the 12CO(3-2) line at an angular resolution of 15" and a velocity resolution of ~0.4km/s using HARP-B and ACSIS on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope. The star formation process is heavily…
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