The SEDIGISM survey: Molecular cloud morphology. I. Classification and star formation
K. R. Neralwar, D. Colombo, A. Duarte-Cabral, J. S. Urquhart, M., Mattern, F. Wyrowski, K. M. Menten, P. Barnes, A. Sanchez-Monge, H. Beuther,, A. J. Rigby, P. Mazumdar, D. Eden, T. Csengeri, C.L. Dobbs, V. S. Veena, S., Neupane, T. Henning, F. Schuller, S. Leurini, M. Wienen

TL;DR
This study classifies over ten thousand molecular clouds from the SEDIGISM survey by morphology, revealing filamentary structures and their relation to star formation, using both visual and automated methods.
Contribution
It introduces a novel automated classification algorithm (J plots) for molecular cloud morphology and applies it to a large cloud sample, comparing results with other surveys.
Findings
Most molecular clouds are elongated or filamentary.
Ring-like and clumpy clouds exhibit higher star formation activity.
Automated classification aligns well with visual inspection results.
Abstract
We present one of the very first extensive classifications of a large sample of molecular clouds based on their morphology. This is achieved using a recently published catalogue of 10663 clouds obtained from the first data release of the SEDIGISM survey. The clouds are classified into four different morphologies by visual inspection and using an automated algorithm -- J plots. The visual inspection also serves as a test for the J plots algorithm, as this is the first time it has been used on molecular gas. Generally, it has been found that the structure of molecular clouds is highly filamentary and our observations indeed verify that most of our molecular clouds are elongated structures. Based on our visual classification of the 10663 SEDIGISM clouds, 15% are ring-like, 57% are elongated, 15% are concentrated and 10% are clumpy clouds. The remaining clouds do not belong to any of these…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Fullerene Chemistry and Applications
