Milky Way Star Forming Complexes and the Turbulent Motion of the Galaxy's Molecular Gas
E. J. Lee, N. Murray, and M. Rahman

TL;DR
This study identifies star forming complexes in the Milky Way using infrared and radio data, quantifies their luminosities, and demonstrates their significant role in driving the galaxy's molecular gas turbulence.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive luminosity function of Galactic star forming complexes and links their bubble expansion to the turbulence in molecular gas.
Findings
280 star forming complexes identified
Star formation rate estimated at 1.2 solar masses per year
Bubble expansion accounts for 65% of molecular gas turbulence
Abstract
We analyze Spitzer GLIMPSE, MSX, and WMAP images of the Milky Way to identify 8 micron and free-free sources in the Galaxy. Seventy-two of the eighty-eight WMAP sources have coverage in the GLIMPSE and MSX surveys suitable for identifying massive star forming complexes (SFC). We measure the ionizing luminosity functions of the SFCs and study their role in the turbulent motion of the Galaxy's molecular gas. We find a total Galactic free-free flux f_{\nu} = 46177.6 Jy; the 72 WMAP sources with full 8 micron coverage account for 34263.5 Jy (~75%), with both measurements made at \nu=94GHz (W band). We find a total of 280 SFCs, of which 168 have unique kinematic distances and free-free luminosities. We use a simple model for the radial distribution of star formation to estimate the free-free and ionizing luminosity for the sources lacking distance determinations. The total dust-corrected…
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