Dense Molecular Clumps associated with the LMC Supergiant Shells LMC 4 \& LMC 5
Kosuke Fujii, Tetsuhiro Minamidani, Norikazu Mizuno, Toshikazu Onishi,, Akiko Kawamura, Erik Muller, Joanne Dawson, Ken'ichi Tatematsu, Tetsuo, Hasegawa, Tomoka Tosaki, Rie E. Miura, Kazuyuki Muraoka, Takeshi Sakai,, Takashi Tsukagoshi, Kunihiko Tanaka, Hajime Ezawa

TL;DR
This study examines how supergiant shells in the Large Magellanic Cloud influence dense molecular clumps and star formation, revealing that shell interactions promote the formation of dense, warm clumps associated with early star formation stages.
Contribution
It provides new observational evidence that interactions between supergiant shells enhance the formation of dense molecular clumps and potentially trigger star formation in the LMC.
Findings
Dense molecular clumps are distributed with high densities and temperatures.
Shell interactions correlate with increased star formation activity.
Clumps near shell interfaces show properties similar to massive cluster-forming regions.
Abstract
We investigate the effects of Supergiant Shells (SGSs) and their interaction on dense molecular clumps by observing the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) star forming regions N48 and N49, which are located between two SGSs, LMC 4 and LMC 5. CO (=3-2, 1-0) and CO (=1-0) observations with the ASTE and Mopra telescopes have been carried out towards these regions. A clumpy distribution of dense molecular clumps is revealed with 7 pc spatial resolution. Large velocity gradient analysis shows that the molecular hydrogen densities () of the clumps are distributed from low to high density (- cm) and their kinetic temperatures () are typically high (greater than K). These clumps seem to be in the early stages of star formation, as also indicated from the distribution of H, young stellar object candidates, and IR emission.…
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