A Search for 3-mm Molecular Absorption Line Transitions in the Magellanic Stream
Lucille Steffes, Daniel R. Rybarczyk, Sne\v{z}ana Stanimirovi\'c, J., R. Dawson, Mary Putman, Philipp Richter, John Gallagher III, Harvey Liszt,, Claire Murray, John Dickey, Carl Heiles, Audra Hernandez, Robert Lindner,, Yangyang Liu, Naomi McClure-Griffiths, Tony Wong

TL;DR
This study searches for molecular absorption lines in the Magellanic Stream using ALMA data but finds no detections, providing upper limits and discussing implications for molecular gas presence and formation conditions.
Contribution
First sensitive search for specific molecular absorption lines in the Magellanic Stream, setting upper limits and exploring conditions for molecular gas formation in this environment.
Findings
No molecular line detections at 3σ significance.
Upper limits on molecular column densities range from 3×10^{10} to 10^{13} cm^{-2}.
Possible reasons for non-detection include low molecular abundance or small dense clumps.
Abstract
The Magellanic Stream, a tidal tail of diffuse gas falling onto the Milky Way, formed by interactions between the Small and Large Magellanic Clouds, is primarily composed of neutral atomic hydrogen (HI). The deficiency of dust and the diffuse nature of the present gas make molecular formation rare and difficult, but if present, could lead to regions potentially suitable for star formation, thereby allowing us to probe conditions of star formation similar to those at high redshifts. We search for HCO, HCN, HNC, and CH using the highest sensitivity observations of molecular absorption data from the Atacama Large Millimeter Array to trace these regions, comparing with HI archival data to compare these environments in the Magellanic Stream to the HI column density threshold for molecular formation in the Milky Way. We also compare the line of sight locations with confirmed locations…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeophysics and Sensor Technology
