Submillimeter Line Emission from LMC 30Dor: The Impact of a Starburst on a Low Metallicity Environment
Jorge L. Pineda (JPL), Norikazu Mizuno (ALMA-J), Markus Roellig, (KOSMA), Juergen Stutzki (KOSMA), Carsten Kramer (IRAM), Ulrich Klein (AIFA),, and Monica Rubio (U. Chile)

TL;DR
This study investigates how intense star formation and strong ultraviolet radiation influence the physical and chemical properties of low-metallicity molecular gas in the 30 Doradus region of the Large Magellanic Cloud, using submillimeter line observations.
Contribution
It provides detailed modeling of the molecular gas conditions in 30 Doradus, revealing the impact of a starburst on low-metallicity environments through high-resolution submillimeter observations.
Findings
Molecular gas in 30Dor-10 is warmer (~160 K) and less dense than in N159W.
Strong FUV radiation heats and disrupts the molecular gas in 30Dor-10.
FUV intensity in 30Dor-10 is estimated at about 3100 times the standard interstellar field.
Abstract
(Abridged) The 30 Dor region in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) is the most vigorous star-forming region in the Local Group. Star formation in this region is taking place in low-metallicity molecular gas that is exposed to an extreme far--ultraviolet (FUV) radiation field powered by the massive compact star cluster R136. We used the NANTEN2 telescope to obtain high-angular resolution observations of the 12CO 4-3, 7-6, and 13CO 4-3 rotational lines and [CI] 3P1-3P0 and 3P2-3P1 fine-structure submillimeter transitions in 30Dor-10, the brightest CO and FIR-emitting cloud at the center of the 30Dor region. We derived the properties of the low-metallicity molecular gas using an excitation/radiative transfer code and found a self-consistent solution of the chemistry and thermal balance of the gas in the framework of a clumpy cloud PDR model. We compared the derived properties with those in…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
