CHIMPS: Physical properties of molecular clumps across the inner Galaxy
A. J. Rigby, T. J. T. Moore, D. J. Eden, J. S. Urquhart, S. E. Ragan,, N. Peretto, R. Plume, M. A. Thompson, M. J. Currie, G. Park

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution molecular gas surveys to analyze the physical properties of molecular clumps in the inner Galaxy, revealing their transitional nature and environmental variations.
Contribution
The paper presents the first catalogues of molecular clumps with detailed physical properties derived from combined high-resolution surveys, highlighting their transitional role in molecular cloud evolution.
Findings
Clumps are intermediate between large clouds and dense cores.
No significant variation in mass or density with Galactocentric distance.
Inter-arm clumps have narrower linewidths and lower virial parameters.
Abstract
The latest generation of high-angular-resolution unbiased Galactic plane surveys in molecular-gas tracers are enabling the interiors of molecular clouds to be studied across a range of environments. The CHIMPS survey simultaneously mapped a sector of the inner Galactic plane, within 27.8 < l < 46.2 deg and |b| < 0.5 deg, in 13CO and C18O (3-2) at 15 arcsec resolution. The combination of CHIMPS data with 12CO (3-2) data from the COHRS survey has enabled us to perform a voxel-by-voxel local-thermodynamic-equilibrium analysis, determining the excitation temperature, optical depth, and column density of 13CO at each l,b,v position. Distances to discrete sources identified by FellWalker in the 13CO (3-2) emission maps were determined, allowing the calculation of numerous physical properties of the sources, and we present the first source catalogues in this paper. We find that, in terms of…
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