Tracing the Conversion of Gas into Stars in Young Massive Cluster Progenitors
D. L. Walker, S. N. Longmore, N. Bastian, J. M. D. Kruijssen, J. M., Rathborne, J. M. Jackson, J. B. Foster, Y. Contreras

TL;DR
This study investigates the physical properties of molecular clouds near the Galactic center to understand their potential as progenitors of young massive clusters, revealing hierarchical formation processes rather than monolithic collapse.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of candidate YMC progenitor clouds' structure and dynamics, supporting hierarchical formation models.
Findings
Clouds are gravitationally bound and likely YMC progenitors.
Gas density profiles are less compact than those of mature YMCs.
Hierarchical processes are suggested for YMC formation.
Abstract
Whilst young massive clusters (YMCs; 10 M, age 100 Myr) have been identified in significant numbers, their progenitor gas clouds have eluded detection. Recently, four extreme molecular clouds residing within 200 pc of the Galactic centre have been identified as having the properties thought necessary to form YMCs. Here we utilise far-IR continuum data from the Herschel Infrared Galactic Plane Survey (HiGAL) and millimetre spectral line data from the Millimetre Astronomy Legacy Team 90 GHz Survey (MALT90) to determine their global physical and kinematic structure. We derive their masses, dust temperatures and radii and use virial analysis to conclude that they are all likely gravitationally bound -- confirming that they are likely YMC progenitors. We then compare the density profiles of these clouds to those of the gas and stellar components of…
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