Physical characterization of S169: A prototypical IR bubble associated with the massive star-forming region IRAS12326-6245
N. U. Duronea, S. Cichowolski, L. Bronfman, E. Mendoza, R. Finger, L., A. Suad, M. Corti, and E. M. Reynoso

TL;DR
This study characterizes the IR bubble S169 and its associated star-forming region IRAS12326-6245, revealing molecular structures, star formation activity, and proposing an expanding shell model to explain observed features.
Contribution
It provides a detailed molecular and dust analysis of S169, identifies key condensations and candidate YSOs, and introduces a simple expanding shell model for the nebula's morphology and kinematics.
Findings
Identified three molecular components with distinct velocities.
Detected six molecular condensations, with MC3 as the densest.
Estimated the distance to S169 and IRAS12326-6245 as approximately 2 kpc.
Abstract
With the aim of studying the properties of Galactic IR bubbles and their impact in massive star formation, we present a study of the IR bubble S169, associated with the massive star forming region IRAS12326-6245. We used CO(2-1),CO(2-1), CO(2-1), HCN(3-2), and HCO+(3-2) line data obtained with the APEX telescope to study the properties of the molecular gas in the nebula and the IRAS source . To analyze the properties and distribution of the dust, we used IRAC-GLIMPSE, Herschel, and ATLASGAL data. The properties of the ionized gas were studied using images obtained from the SUMSS survey and SuperCOSMOS database. In our search for stellar and protostellar objects in the region, we used IR and optical point source calalogs. The new APEX observations allowed us to identify three molecular components associated with the nebula, namely: at 39 km/s (component A), 25 km/s…
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