The Forgotten Quadrant Survey. $^{12}$CO and $^{13}$CO (1-0) survey of the Galactic Plane in the range 220{\deg}$<l<$240{\deg} -2.5{\deg}$<b<$0{\deg}
M. Benedettini, S. Molinari, A. Baldeschi, M. T. Beltran, J. Brand, R., Cesaroni, D. Elia, F. Fontani, M. Merello, L. Olmi, S. Pezzuto, K. L. J., Rygl, E. Schisano, L. Testi, A. Traficante

TL;DR
The Forgotten Quadrant Survey maps the Galactic Plane in CO lines, producing a detailed catalog of molecular clouds at various scales, revealing their physical properties and classifications in the outer Galaxy.
Contribution
First self-consistent, statistical catalog of molecular clouds in the outer Galaxy with subarcminute resolution, detecting both large and small cloud structures.
Findings
Identified 263 molecular clouds in the outer Galaxy.
Distinguished between giant molecular clouds and smaller, transient structures.
Derived CO conversion factors consistent with previous estimates.
Abstract
We present the Forgotten Quadrant Survey (FQS), an ESO large project that used the 12m antenna of the Arizona Radio Observatory to map the Galactic Plane in the range 220\deg240\deg and -2.5\deg0\deg, both in CO(1-0) and CO(1-0), at a spectral resolution of 0.65 km s and 0.26 km s. Our dataset allows us to easily identify how the molecular dense gas is organised at different spatial scales: from the giant clouds with their denser filamentary networks, down to the clumps and cores that host the newborn stars and to obtain reliable estimates of their key physical parameters. We present the first release of the FQS data and discuss their quality. Spectra with 0.65 km s velocity channels have a noise ranging from 0.8 K to 1.3 K for CO(1-0) and from 0.3 K to 0.6 K for CO(1-0). In this paper, we used the CO(1-0) spectral cubes…
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