Connecting Young Star Clusters to CO Molecular Gas in NGC 7793 with ALMA-LEGUS
K. Grasha, D. Calzetti, L. Bittle, K.E. Johnson, J. Donovan Meyer,, R.C. Kennicutt, B.G. Elmegreen, A. Adamo, M.R. Krumholz, M. Fumagalli, E.K., Grebel, D.A. Gouliermis, D.O. Cook, J.S. Gallagher III, A. Aloisi, D.A. Dale,, S. Linden, E. Sacchi, D.A. Thilker, R.A.M. Walterbos

TL;DR
This study reveals a strong spatial and hierarchical correlation between young star clusters and GMCs in NGC 7793, showing clusters emerge from clouds within 11 Myr and trace the same hierarchy as their parent GMCs.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the spatial relationship and hierarchical structure between GMCs and star clusters using high-resolution ALMA and HST data.
Findings
Clusters younger than 11 Myr are associated with GMCs.
Star clusters exhibit a fractal clustering pattern.
Massive star clusters trace the same hierarchy as GMCs.
Abstract
We present an investigation of the relationship between giant molecular cloud (GMC) properties and the associated stellar clusters in the nearby flocculent galaxy NGC 7793. We combine the star cluster catalog from the HST LEGUS (Legacy ExtraGalactic UV Survey) program with the 15 parsec resolution ALMA CO(2-1) observations. We find a strong spatial correlation between young star clusters and GMCs such that all clusters still associated with a GMC are younger than 11 Myr and display a median age of 2 Myr. The age distribution increases gradually as the cluster-GMC distance increases, with star clusters that are spatially unassociated with molecular gas exhibiting a median age of 7 Myr. Thus, star clusters are able to emerge from their natal clouds long before the timescale required for clouds to disperse. To investigate if the hierarchy observed in the stellar components is inherited…
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