Molecular Lines of 13 Galactic Infrared Bubble Regions
Qing-zeng Yan, Ye Xu, Bo Zhang, Deng-rong Lu, Xi Chen, Zheng-hong, Tang

TL;DR
This study investigates molecular clouds and star formation around 13 galactic infrared bubbles using molecular line observations and surveys, revealing cloud properties, dynamics, and potential triggered star formation activities.
Contribution
It provides detailed molecular line data and analysis of physical properties, dynamics, and star formation indicators in bubble regions, highlighting processes like collect-and-collapse and radiation-driven implosion.
Findings
Bubbles are connected with giant molecular clouds.
Velocity gradients suggest bubble expansion.
Evidence of star formation triggered by bubbles.
Abstract
We investigated the physical properties of molecular clouds and star formation processes around infrared bubbles which are essentially expanding HII regions. We performed observations of 13 galactic infrared bubble fields containing 18 bubbles. Five molecular lines, 12CO (J=1-0), 13CO (J=1-0), C18O(J=1-0), HCN (J=1-0), and HCO+ (J=1-0), were observed, and several publicly available surveys, GLIMPSE, MIPSGAL, ATLASGAL, BGPS, VGPS, MAGPIS, and NVSS, were used for comparison. We find that these bubbles are generally connected with molecular clouds, most of which are giant. Several bubble regions display velocity gradients and broad shifted profiles, which could be due to the expansion of bubbles. The masses of molecular clouds within bubbles range from 100 to 19,000 solar mass, and their dynamic ages are about 0.3-3.7 Myr, which takes into account the internal turbulence pressure of…
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