Short GMC lifetimes: an observational estimate with the PdBI Arcsecond Whirlpool Survey (PAWS)
Sharon E. Meidt, Annie Hughes, Clare L. Dobbs, Jerome Pety, Todd A., Thompson, Santiago Garcia-Burillo, Adam K. Leroy, Eva Schinnerer, Dario, Colombo, Miguel Querejeta, Carsten Kramer, Karl F. Schuster, Gaelle Dumas

TL;DR
This study estimates the short lifetimes of giant molecular clouds in M51's inter-arm regions, highlighting the influence of galactic shear and feedback on cloud disruption and molecular gas cycling.
Contribution
It introduces a novel observational method to measure GMC lifetimes and identifies the dominant cloud destruction mechanisms across galactic environments.
Findings
GMC lifetimes in M51's inter-arm are 20-30 Myr.
Galactic shear predominantly regulates cloud disruption.
A transition from shear to feedback dominance occurs with radius.
Abstract
We describe and execute a novel approach to observationally estimate the lifetimes of giant molecular clouds (GMCs). We focus on the cloud population between the two main spiral arms in M51 (the inter-arm region) where cloud destruction via shear and star formation feedback dominates over formation processes. By monitoring the change in GMC number densities and properties from one side of the inter-arm to the other, we estimate the lifetime as a fraction of the inter-arm travel time. We find that GMC lifetimes in M51's inter-arm are finite and short, 20 to 30 Myr. Such short lifetimes suggest that cloud evolution is influenced by environment, in which processes can disrupt GMCs after a few free-fall times. Over most of the region under investigation shear appears to regulate the lifetime. As the shear timescale increases with galactocentric radius, we expect cloud destruction to switch…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Advanced Fiber Laser Technologies · Phase Equilibria and Thermodynamics
