High-Mass Star Formation in the Outer Scutum-Centaurus Arm
W. P. Armentrout, L. D. Anderson, Dana S. Balser, T. M. Bania, T. M., Dame, Trey V. Wenger

TL;DR
This study investigates high-mass star formation in the distant Outer Scutum-Centaurus spiral arm of the Milky Way, identifying new HII regions and confirming their association with the arm through radio and maser observations.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive survey of HII regions in the OSC, discovering two new high-mass star formation sites and increasing known regions to twelve.
Findings
Nearly 60% of targets detected in radio continuum.
Over 20% showed ammonia or water maser emission.
High-mass stars as early as spectral type O4 found in the OSC.
Abstract
The Outer Scutum-Centaurus (OSC) spiral arm is the most distant molecular spiral arm in the Milky Way, but until recently little was known about this structure. Discovered by Dame and Thaddeus (2011), the OSC lies 15 kpc from the Galactic Center. Due to the Galactic warp, it rises to nearly 4 above the Galactic Plane in the first Galactic quadrant, leaving it unsampled by most Galactic plane surveys. Here we observe HII region candidates spatially coincident with the OSC using the Very Large Array to image radio continuum emission from 65 targets and the Green Bank Telescope to search for ammonia and water maser emission from 75 targets. This sample, drawn from the WISE Catalog of Galactic HII Regions, represents every HII region candidate near the longitude-latitude (l,v) locus of the OSC. Coupled with their characteristic mid-infrared morphologies, detection of radio…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
