A Morphological Classification of 18190 Molecular Clouds Identified in $^{12}$CO Data from the MWISP Survey
Lixia Yuan, Ji Yang, Fujun Du, Xunchuan Liu, Shaobo Zhang, Zehao Lin,, Jingfei Sun, Qing-Zeng Yan, Yuehui Ma, Yang Su, Yan Sun, Xin Zhou

TL;DR
This study classifies 18190 molecular clouds from the MWISP survey into unresolved, non-filament, and filament types, revealing that filaments dominate the CO emission flux despite being fewer in number.
Contribution
It provides a large-scale morphological classification of molecular clouds using $^{12}$CO data, highlighting the prevalence and flux contribution of filamentary structures.
Findings
Approximately 25% unresolved, 64% non-filaments, 11% filaments.
Filaments contribute about 90% of the total $^{12}$CO flux.
Filaments tend to have larger angular sizes than non-filaments.
Abstract
We attempt to visually classify the morphologies of 18190 molecular clouds, which are identified in the CO(1-0) spectral line data over 450 deg of the second Galactic quadrant from the Milky Way Imaging Scroll Painting project (MWISP). Using the velocity-integrated intensity maps of the CO(1-0) emission, molecular clouds are first divided into unresolved and resolved ones. The resolved clouds are further classified as non-filaments or filaments. Among the 18190 molecular clouds, 25 are unresolved, 64 are non-filaments, and 11 are filaments. In the terms of the integrated flux of CO(1-0) spectra of the whole 18190 molecular clouds, 90 are from filaments, 9 are from non-filaments, and the rest 1 are from unresolved sources. Although non-filaments are dominant in the number of the discrete…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Spectroscopy and Laser Applications · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
