A Herschel study of G214.5-1.8: a young, cold and quiescent giant molecular filament on the shell of a HI superbubble
S. D. Clarke, A. Sanchez-Monge, G. M. Williams, A. D. P. Howard, S., Walch, N. Schneider

TL;DR
This study analyzes the cold, quiescent giant molecular filament G214.5-1.8 in the outer Galaxy using Herschel data, revealing its morphology, low star formation activity, and potential interaction with a nearby HI superbubble.
Contribution
It provides a detailed characterization of G214.5's structure, environment, and star formation properties, highlighting its unique features and possible interaction with a superbubble.
Findings
G214.5 has a mass of ~16,000 solar masses with few protostars.
The filament is highly asymmetric and resembles a compressed structure.
G214.5 is spatially and kinematically associated with an HI superbubble.
Abstract
We present an analysis of the outer Galaxy giant molecular filament (GMF) G214.5-1.8 (G214.5) using Herschel data. We find that G214.5 has a mass of 16,000 M, yet hosts only 15 potentially protostellar 70 m sources, making it highly quiescent compared to equally massive clouds such as Serpens and Mon R2. We show that G214.5 has a unique morphology, consisting of a narrow `Main filament' running north-south and a perpendicular `Head' structure running east-west. We identify 33 distinct massive clumps from the column density maps, 8 of which are protostellar. However, the star formation activity is not evenly spread across G214.5 but rather predominantly located in the Main filament. Studying the Main filament in a manner similar to previous works, we find that G214.5 is most like a 'Bone' candidate GMF, highly elongated and massive, but it is colder and narrower…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum, superfluid, helium dynamics · Cold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Astro and Planetary Science
