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An Outer Arm in the Second Galactic Quadrant: Structure

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arxiv 1602.08229 v2 pith:FKU3RXKS submitted 2016-02-26 astro-ph.GA astro-ph.SR

An Outer Arm in the Second Galactic Quadrant: Structure

classification astro-ph.GA astro-ph.SR
keywords outerdatadetectedgalacticmilkymolecularmwisparea
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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The lack of arm tracers, especially the remote tracers, is one of the most difficult problems preventing us from studying the structure of the Milky Way. Fortunately, with its high-sensitivity CO survey, the Milky Way Imaging Scroll Painting (MWISP) project offers such an opportunity. Since completing about one-third of its mission, an area of l=[100,150] deg, b=[-3,5] deg has nearly been covered. The Outer arm of the Milky Way first clearly revealed its shape in the second galactic quadrant in the form of molecular gas --- this is the first time that the Outer arm has been reported in such a large-scale mapping of molecular gas. Using the 115 GHz 12CO(1-0) data of MWISP at the LSR velocity ~= [-100,-60] km s^-1 and in the area mentioned above, we have detected 481 molecular clouds in total, and among them 332 (about 69\%) are newly detected and 457 probably belong to the Outer arm. The total mass of the detected Outer arm clouds is ~ 3.1*10^6 M_sun. Assuming that the spiral arm is a logarithmic spiral, the pitch angle is fitted as ~ 13.1 deg. Besides combining both the CO data from MWISP and the 21 cm HI data from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey (CGPS), the gas distribution, warp, and thickness of the Outer arm are also studied.

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