Velocity profiles of [CII], [CI], CO, and [OI] and physical conditions in four star-forming regions in the Large Magellanic Cloud
Yoko Okada (1), Rolf G\"usten (2), Miguel Angel Requena-Torres (3,2),, Markus R\"ollig (1), J\"urgen Stutzki (1), Urs U. Graf (1), Annie Hughes (4), ((1) Universit\"at zu K\"oln, (2) Max-Planck-Institut f\"ur Radioastronomie,, (3) University of Maryland

TL;DR
This study investigates the physical conditions of the star-forming interstellar medium in four regions of the Large Magellanic Cloud by analyzing multiple emission lines and modeling the data with the KOSMA-tau PDR model.
Contribution
It provides detailed spatial and spectral analysis of emission lines in four LMC regions and applies an advanced PDR model to interpret the physical properties of the ISM.
Findings
[CII] shows wider line profiles than CO and [CI]
Different line profiles indicate spatially separated clouds or phases
Emission from some regions is weaker due to mutual shielding among clumps
Abstract
The aim of our study is to investigate the physical properties of the star-forming interstellar medium (ISM) in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) by separating the origin of the emission lines spatially and spectrally. Following Okada et al. (2015, Paper I), we investigate different phases of the ISM traced by carbon-bearing species in four star-forming regions in the LMC, and model the physical properties using the KOSMA-tau PDR model. We mapped 3--13 arcmin areas in 30 Dor, N158, N160 and N159 along the molecular ridge of the LMC in [CII]158um with GREAT on board SOFIA, and in CO(2-1) to (6-5), CO(2-1) and (3-2), [CI]3P1-3P0 and 3P2-3P1 with APEX. In all four star-forming regions, the line profiles of CO, CO, and [CI] emission are similar, whereas [CII] typically shows wider line profiles or an additional velocity component. For selected positions in N159 and 30 Dor,…
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