ALMA Detects CO(3-2) within a Super Star Cluster in NGC5253 [GA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1706.09944


We present images of CO(J=3-2) emission near the supernebula in the dwarf galaxy NGC~5253, which contains one of the best examples of a potential globular cluster in formation. The 0.3″ resolution images reveal an unusual molecular cloud, “Cloud D1”, coincident with the radio-infrared supernebula. The ~6-pc diameter cloud has a linewidth, $\Delta$ v = 21.7 km/s, that reflects only the gravitational potential of the star cluster residing within it. The corresponding virial mass is 2.5 x 10$^5$ M$\odot$. The cluster appears to have a top-heavy initial mass function, with $M{low}$~1-2 M$_\odot$. Molecular gas mass is very uncertain but constitutes < 35% of the dynamical mass within the cloud boundaries. Cloud D1 is probably bright in CO(3-2) because the gas is optically thin and hot. In spite of the presence of an estimated ~1500-2000 O stars within the small cloud, the CO appears relatively undisturbed. We propose that Cloud D1 consists of star-forming cores orbiting with more evolved stars in the core of the giant cluster.

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J. Turner, S. Consiglio, S. Beck, et. al.
Mon, 3 Jul 17
12/51

Comments: 7 pages, 2 figures. Submitted to ApJ