Inadequate turbulent support in low-metallicity molecular clouds
Lingrui Lin, Zhi-Yu Zhang, Junzhi Wang, Padelis P. Papadopoulos, Yong, Shi, Yan Gong, Yan Sun, Yichen Sun, Thomas G. Bisbas, Donatella Romano, Di, Li, Hauyu Baobab Liu, Keping Qiu, Lijie Liu, Gan Luo, Chao-Wei Tsai, Jingwen, Wu, Siyi Feng, and Bo Zhang

TL;DR
This study shows that in low-metallicity environments, turbulence cannot support molecular clouds against gravity, suggesting magnetic fields may play a more significant role in cloud stability and star formation.
Contribution
It provides new observational evidence of declining virial parameters in low-metallicity clouds and highlights the potential dominance of magnetic support over turbulence in such environments.
Findings
Virial parameter decreases with metallicity
Turbulence insufficient for cloud support in low-metallicity regions
Magnetic fields may dominate cloud support in metal-poor environments
Abstract
The dynamic properties of molecular clouds are set by the interplay of their self-gravity, turbulence, external pressure and magnetic fields. Extended surveys of Galactic molecular clouds typically find that their kinetic energy () counterbalances their self-gravitational energy (), setting their virial parameter . However, past studies either have been biased by the use of optically-thick lines or have been limited within the solar neighborhood and the inner Galaxy (Galactocentric radius kpc). Here we present sensitive mapping observations of optically thin CO lines towards molecular clouds in the low-metallicity Galactic outer disk ( kpc). By combining archival data from the inner Galaxy and four nearby metal-poor dwarf galaxies, we reveal a…
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