# The JCMT Plane Survey: First complete data release - emission maps and   compact source catalogue

**Authors:** D. J. Eden, T.J.T. Moore, R. Plume, J.S. Urquhart, M.A. Thompson, H., Parsons, J.T. Dempsey, A.J. Rigby, L.K. Morgan, H.S. Thomas, D. Berry, J., Buckle, C.M. Brunt, H.M. Butner, D. Carretero, A. Chrysostomou, M.J. Currie,, H.M. deVilliers, M. Fich, A.G. Gibb, M.G. Hoare, T. Jenness, G. Manser, J.C., Mottram, C. Natario, F. Olguin, N. Peretto, M. Pestalozzi, D. Polychroni,, R.O. Redman, C. Salji, L.J. Summers, K. Tahani, A. Traficante, J., diFrancesco, A. Evans, G.A. Fuller, D. Johnstone, G. Joncas, S.N. Longmore,, P.G. Martin, J.S. Richer, B. Weferling, G.J. White, M. Zhu

arXiv: 1704.02982 · 2017-06-21

## TL;DR

The JCMT Plane Survey's first data release provides detailed emission maps and a compact source catalogue, enabling improved studies of star formation and molecular cloud structures in the Galactic Plane.

## Contribution

This work presents the first complete data release of the JCMT Plane Survey, including emission maps and a catalogue of over 7,800 sources, with analysis of their association with molecular clouds and star formation.

## Key findings

- 42% of emission is contained in the compact-source catalogue
- 98% of sources are associated with molecular clouds
- 38% of sources show evidence of ongoing star formation

## Abstract

We present the first data release of the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) Plane Survey (JPS), the JPS Public Release 1 (JPSPR1). JPS is an 850-um continuum survey of six fields in the northern inner Galactic Plane in a longitude range of l=7-63, made with the Sub-millimetre Common-User Bolometer Array 2 (SCUBA-2). This first data release consists of emission maps of the six JPS regions with an average pixel-to-pixel noise of 7.19 mJy beam^-1, when smoothed over the beam, and a compact-source catalogue containing 7,813 sources. The 95 per cent completeness limits of the catalogue are estimated at 0.04 Jy beam^-1 and 0.3 Jy for the peak and integrated flux densities, respectively. The emission contained in the compact-source catalogue is 42 +- 5 per cent of the total and, apart from the large-scale (greater than 8') emission, there is excellent correspondence with features in the 500-um Herschel maps. We find that, with two-dimensional matching, 98 +- 2 per cent of sources within the fields centred at l=20, 30, 40 and 50 are associated with molecular clouds, with 91 +- 3 per cent of the l=30 and 40 sources associated with dense molecular clumps. Matching the JPS catalogue to Herschel 70-um sources, we find that 38 +- 1 per cent of sources show evidence of ongoing star formation. The images and catalogue will be a valuable resource for studies of star formation in the Galaxy and the role of environment and spiral arms in the star formation process.

## Full text

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## Figures

18 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1704.02982/full.md

## References

84 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1704.02982/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1704.02982