High-mass star formation across the Large Magellanic Cloud I. Chemical properties and hot molecular cores observed with ALMA at 1.2 mm
Roya Hamedani Golshan, \'Alvaro S\'anchez-Monge, Peter Schilke, Marta, Sewi{\l}o, Thomas M\"oller, V. S. Veena, and Gary A. Fuller

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA observations to identify and analyze hot molecular cores in the Low Magellanic Cloud, revealing their chemical properties, distribution, and the influence of metallicity on star formation.
Contribution
First detection of hot cores with complex organic molecules in the LMC, highlighting the impact of metallicity on hot core formation and chemical complexity.
Findings
Detected 7 hot cores, 6 in the galaxy's bar region.
Hot cores show emission of complex organic molecules.
Hot core formation correlates with higher metallicity regions.
Abstract
To study the impact of the initial effects of metallicity (i.e., the abundance of elements heavier than helium) on star formation and the formation of different molecular species, we searched for hot molecular cores in the sub-solar metallicity environment of the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC). We conducted an ALMA Band 6 observations of 20 fields centered on young stellar objects (YSOs) distributed over the LMC in order to search for hot molecular cores in this galaxy. We detected a total of 65 compact 1.2 mm continuum cores in the 20 ALMA fields and analyzed their spectra with XCLASS software. The main temperature tracers are CH3OH and SO2, with more than two transitions detected in the observed frequency ranges. Other molecular lines with high detection rates in our sample are CS , SO, H13CO+, H13CN, HC15 N, and SiO. More complex molecules, such as HNCO, HDCO, HC3N, CH3CN, and NH2CHO,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Space Exploration and Technology · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
