THOR - The HI, OH, Recombination Line Survey of the Milky Way - The pilot study: HI observations of the giant molecular cloud W43
S. Bihr, H. Beuther, J. Ott, K.G. Johnston, A. Brunthaler, L. D., Anderson, F. Bigiel, P. Carlhoff, E. Churchwell, S.C.O. Glover, P.F., Goldsmith, F. Heitsch, T. Henning, M.H. Heyer, T. Hill, A. Hughes, R.S., Klessen, H. Linz, S.N. Longmore, N.M. McClure-Griffiths, K.M. Menten

TL;DR
This study uses detailed radio observations to accurately measure the HI mass and density structure of the W43 molecular cloud, revealing higher-than-expected HI column densities that challenge existing models of hydrogen transition in star-forming regions.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed correction of HI emission for optical depth effects in a GMC, leading to more accurate mass estimates and insights into the atomic-molecular hydrogen transition.
Findings
HI mass of W43 is 2.4 times larger than optically thin estimates.
HI column densities reach ~1.9x10^22 cm^-2, exceeding theoretical thresholds.
No sharp atomic-molecular transition observed in W43.
Abstract
To study the atomic, molecular and ionized emission of Giant Molecular Clouds (GMCs), we have initiated a Large Program with the VLA: 'THOR - The HI, OH, Recombination Line survey of the Milky Way'. We map the 21cm HI line, 4 OH lines, 19 H_alpha recombination lines and the continuum from 1 to 2 GHz of a significant fraction of the Milky Way (l=15-67deg, |b|<1deg) at ~20" resolution. In this paper, we focus on the HI emission from the W43 star-formation complex. Classically, the HI 21cm line is treated as optically thin with column densities calculated under this assumption. This might give reasonable results for regions of low-mass star-formation, however, it is not sufficient to describe GMCs. We analyzed strong continuum sources to measure the optical depth, and thus correct the HI 21cm emission for optical depth effects and weak diffuse continuum emission. Hence, we are able to…
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