PHANGS-JWST: the largest extragalactic molecular cloud catalog traced by polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon emission
Z. Bazzi, D. Colombo, F. Bigiel, A. K. Leroy, E. Rosolowsky, K. Sandstrom, A. Duarte-Cabral, H. Faustino Vieira, M. I. N. Kobayashi, H. He, S. E. Meidt, A. T. Barnes, R. S. Klessen, S. C. O. Glover, M. D. Thorp, H.-A. Pan, R. Chown, R. J. Smith, D. A. Dale, T. G. Williams

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution JWST images to identify and analyze over 250,000 PAH-emitting clouds in 66 galaxies, revealing their properties, distributions, and associations with molecular gas, thereby advancing understanding of galactic molecular cloud structures.
Contribution
First large-scale catalog of PAH-emitting clouds in galaxies, linking PAH emission to molecular gas properties and environmental factors with high-resolution JWST data.
Findings
41% of PAH clouds have CO associations.
Massive clouds are mainly in spiral arms.
Cloud properties vary with galactocentric radius.
Abstract
High-resolution JWST images of nearby spiral galaxies reveal polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) emission structures that trace molecular gas, including CO-dark regions. We identify ISM cloud structures in PHANGS-JWST 7.7 m PAH maps for 66 galaxies, smoothed to 30 pc and at native resolution, extracting 108,466 and 146,040 clouds, respectively. Molecular properties were inferred using a linear conversion from PAH to CO. Given the tendency for clouds in galaxy centers to overlap in velocity space, we opted to flag these and omit them from the analysis in this work. The remaining clouds correspond to giant molecular clouds, such as those detected in CO(2-1) emission by ALMA, or lower surface density clouds that either fall below the ALMA detection limits of existing maps or genuinely have no molecular counterpart. Cross-matching with ALMA CO maps at 90 pc in 27 galaxies shows that…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
