Observations of the [CI] ($^3P_1$-$^3P_0$) emission toward the massive star-forming region RCW38: further evidence for highly-clumped density distribution of the molecular gas
Natsuko Izumi, Yasuo Fukui, Kengo Tachihara, Shinji Fujita, Kazufumi, Torii, Takeshi Kamazaki, Hiroyuki Kaneko, Andrea Silva, Daisuke Iono,, Munetake Momose, Kanako Sugimoto, Takeshi Nakazato, George Kosugi, Jun, Maekawa, Shigeru Takahashi, Akira Yoshino, and Shin'ichiro Asayama

TL;DR
This study observes atomic carbon emission in the RCW38 star-forming region, revealing a highly clumped molecular gas distribution that allows UV radiation penetration, challenging traditional PDR models and supporting recent theoretical clumpy gas models.
Contribution
First observational evidence of high [CI]/CO ratios at large visual extinctions in RCW38, indicating highly clumped molecular gas distribution.
Findings
[CI] emission is mostly optically thin with τ=0.1-0.6.
The [CI]/CO ratio remains high (~0.1) up to A_V=100 mag.
Results support models of highly-clumped molecular gas allowing UV penetration.
Abstract
We present observations of the - fine-structure line of atomic carbon using the ASTE 10 m sub-mm telescope towards RCW38, the youngest super star cluster in the Milky Way. The detected [CI] emission is compared with the CO = 1-0 image cube presented in Fukui et al. (2016) which has an angular resolution of 40 ( 0.33 pc). The overall distribution of the [CI] emission in this cluster is similar to that of the CO emission. The optical depth of the [CI] emission was found to be = 0.1-0.6, suggesting mostly optically thin emission. An empirical conversion factor from the [CI] integrated intensity to the H column density was estimated as = 6.3 10 cm K km s (for visual extinction: 10 mag) and 1.4 10 cm K km s (for of 10-100 mag).…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
