870 micron continuum observations of the bubble-shaped nebula Gum 31
N. U. Duronea, J. Vasquez, L. G\'omez, C. E. Cappa, V. Firpo, C. H., L\'opez-Carballo, and M. Rubio

TL;DR
This study maps and analyzes cold dust and molecular gas in the Gum 31 nebula using 870 micron observations, revealing clump properties, potential star formation sites, and the influence of the nebula's expansion on star formation.
Contribution
First detailed 870 micron dust emission mapping of Gum 31, identifying 60 molecular clumps and analyzing their properties and star formation potential.
Findings
Clumps have radii 0.16-1.35 pc and masses 70-2800 Mo.
Dust temperatures range from 21 K to 32 K, inside HII region up to 40 K.
Only 37% of clumps are above high-mass star formation threshold.
Abstract
We are presenting here a study of the cold dust in the infrared ring nebula Gum 31. We aim at deriving the physical properties of the molecular gas and dust associated with the nebula, and investigating its correlation with the star formation in the region, that was probably triggered by the expansion of the ionization front. We use 870 micron data obtained with LABOCA to map the dust emission. The obtained LABOCA image was compared to archival IR,radio continuum, and optical images. The 870 micron emission follows the 8 micron (Spitzer), 250 micron, and 500 micron (Herschel) emission distributions showing the classical morphology of a spherical shell. We use the 870 micron and 250 micron images to identify 60 dust clumps in the collected layers of molecular gas using the Gaussclumps algorithm. The clumps have effective deconvolved radii between 0.16 pc and 1.35 pc, masses between 70 Mo…
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