Rotation of molecular clouds in M~51
J. Braine, A. Hughes, E. Rosolowsky, P. Gratier, D. Colombo, S. Meidt,, E. Schinnerer

TL;DR
This study investigates the rotation of molecular clouds in galaxy M~51, revealing predominantly prograde rotation aligned with galactic shear, but also a significant retrograde component linked to spiral arms, challenging simple gravitational contraction models.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of molecular cloud rotation in M~51, showing the prevalence of prograde rotation and its relation to spiral structure, extending previous findings from M~33.
Findings
Most clouds exhibit prograde rotation consistent with galactic shear.
Approximately 30% of clouds show retrograde rotation, especially in spiral arms.
Retrograde rotation is linked to spiral gravitational potential effects.
Abstract
The grand-design spiral galaxy M~51 was observed at 40pc resolution in CO(1--0) by the PAWS project. A large number of molecular clouds were identified and we search for velocity gradients in two high signal-to-noise subsamples, containing 682 and 376 clouds. The velocity gradients are found to be systematically prograde oriented, as was previously found for the rather flocculent spiral M~33. This strongly supports the idea that the velocity gradients reflect cloud rotation, rather than more random dynamical forces, such as turbulence. Not only are the gradients prograde, but their and coefficients follow galactic shear in sign, although with a lower amplitude. No link is found between the orientation of the gradient and the orientation of the cloud. The values of the cloud angular momenta appear to be an extension of the…
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