Two Populations of Molecular Clouds in the Antennae Galaxies
Lisa H. Wei, Eric Keto, Luis C. Ho

TL;DR
This study reveals two distinct populations of molecular clouds in the Antennae Galaxies, with the more massive clouds associated with intense star formation, shedding light on the formation of super star clusters in starburst environments.
Contribution
It identifies a break in the molecular cloud mass function, linking cloud populations to starburst activity and super star cluster formation in the Antennae Galaxies.
Findings
Two cloud populations separated by a mass function break.
Massive clouds are located in starburst regions.
Velocity gradients suggest environmental shocks influence cloud formation.
Abstract
Super star clusters --- extremely massive clusters found predominately in starburst environments --- are essential building blocks in the formation of galaxies and thought to dominate star formation in the high-redshift universe. However, the transformation from molecular gas into these ultra-compact star clusters is not well understood. To study this process, we used the Submillimeter Array and the Plateau de Bure Interferometer to obtain high angular resolution (~1.5" or 160 pc) images of the Antennae overlap region in CO(2--1) to search for the molecular progenitors of the super star clusters. We resolve the molecular gas distribution into a large number of clouds, extending the differential cloud mass function down to a 5\sigma completeness limit of 3.8x10^5 M_sun. We identify a distinct break in the mass function around log M_mol/M_sun ~ 6.5, which separates the molecular clouds…
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