The Life and Death of Dense Molecular Clumps in the Large Magellanic Cloud
Jonathan P. Seale, Leslie W. Looney, Tony Wong, Juergen Ott, Uli, Klein, Jorge L. Pineda

TL;DR
This study investigates the properties and evolution of dense molecular clumps in the Large Magellanic Cloud, revealing their connection to star formation and estimating the timescale for clump destruction by young stars.
Contribution
It provides high-resolution observations of molecular clumps, linking their physical properties to star formation activity and estimating the destruction timescale of natal clumps.
Findings
Massive YSO-bearing clumps are larger and more massive.
Clumps without star formation are smaller and less dense.
Young stars tend to destroy their natal clumps within 3 x 10^5 years.
Abstract
We report the results of a high spatial (parsec) resolution HCO+ (J = 1-0) and HCN (J = 1-0) emission survey toward the giant molecular clouds of the star formation regions N105, N113, N159, and N44 in the Large Magellanic Cloud. The HCO+ and HCN observations at 89.2 and 88.6 GHz, respectively, were conducted in the compact configuration of the Australia Telescope Compact Array. The emission is imaged into individual clumps with masses between 10^2 and 10^4 solar masses and radii of <1 pc to ~2 pc. Many of the clumps are coincident with indicators of current massive star formation, indicating that many of the clumps are associated with deeply-embedded forming stars and star clusters. We find that massive YSO-bearing clumps tend to be larger (>1 pc), more massive (M > 10^3 solar masses), and have higher surface densities (~1 g cm^-2), while clumps without signs of star formation are…
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