ATLASGAL -- Relationship between dense star forming clumps and interstellar masers
S. J. Billington, J. S. Urquhart, C. K\"onig, H. Beuther, S. L. Breen,, K. M. Menten, J. Campbell-White, S. P. Ellingsen, M. A. Thompson, T. J. T., Moore, D. J. Eden, W. -J. Kim, S. Leurini

TL;DR
This study explores the relationship between various interstellar masers and dense star-forming clumps in the Galaxy, revealing their physical conditions, evolutionary stages, and statistical lifetimes, thereby enhancing understanding of star formation processes.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of maser associations with star-forming clumps, identifying physical thresholds and evolutionary implications across multiple maser species.
Findings
Maser association rates are 56% for water, 39% for hydroxyl, and 82% for methanol.
Associated clumps are more compact, denser, and more luminous.
Maser production occurs within a narrow evolutionary phase.
Abstract
We have used catalogues from several Galactic plane surveys and dedicated observations to investigate the relationship between various maser species and Galactic star forming clumps, as identified by the ATLASGAL survey. The maser transitions of interest are the 6.7 & 12.2 GHz methanol masers, 22.2 GHz water masers, and the masers emitting in the four ground-state hyperfine structure transitions of hydroxyl. We find clump association rates for the water, hydroxyl and methanol masers to be 56, 39 and 82 per cent respectively, within the Galactic longitude range of 60{\deg} > > -60{\deg}. We investigate the differences in physical parameters between maser associated clumps and the full ATLASGAL sample, and find that clumps coincident with maser emission are more compact with increased densities and luminosities. However, we find the physical conditions within the clumps are similar…
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