ArXiv TLDR

A homogeneous three-dimensional view of Molecular Cloud kinematics out to 2.5 kpc. Using Young Stellar Objects and Open Clusters as complementary tracers

🐦 Tweet
2604.22573

Xabier Pérez-Couto, Santiago Torres, Nuria Miret-Roig, Friedrich Anders, Alexander J. Mustill + 2 more

astro-ph.GAastro-ph.IMastro-ph.SR

TLDR

This paper presents homogeneous 3D kinematics for 15 molecular cloud complexes within 2.5 kpc, validating YSOs and Open Clusters as consistent tracers.

Key contributions

  • Validated Open Clusters (OCs) as reliable tracers of molecular cloud kinematics, consistent with Young Stellar Objects (YSOs).
  • Derived homogeneous 3D kinematics for 15 molecular cloud complexes within 2.5 kpc using 24,732 stellar tracers.
  • Revealed median peculiar velocities of ~8.7 km/s for clouds relative to Galactic rotation.
  • Identified significant expansion in Orion and Ophiuchus, and coherent rotation in at least seven complexes.

Why it matters

This research provides a crucial homogeneous 3D kinematic dataset for molecular clouds, essential for understanding star formation and galactic evolution. By validating Open Clusters as reliable tracers, it offers a powerful new tool for future studies of stellar and gaseous components.

Original Abstract

Understanding the large-scale dynamics of molecular clouds (MCs) is crucial for constraining the processes that govern star formation and the structure and evolution of the Galaxy. While gas tracers have traditionally been used to map MC kinematics, stellar tracers such as young stellar objects (YSOs) and open clusters (OCs) provide a complementary approach that enables direct comparisons between the stellar and gaseous components. We aim to validate OCs as complementary tracers by testing whether they retain the same bulk kinematic imprint as YSOs, and to reconstruct the three-dimensional (3D) motions of the main MC complexes within 2.5 kpc of the Sun using YSOs and young OCs as tracers. Using Gaia DR3 astrometry together with complementary spectroscopic surveys for radial velocities, we compiled a unified sample of 24,732 stellar tracers. We applied robust clustering in proper motion space to identify co-moving YSOs and derived cloud-averaged motions via Monte Carlo sampling. These were compared with the kinematics of OCs younger than 30 Myr. Finally, we performed orbital integrations in a realistic Galactic potential to trace the past evolution of the clouds and quantify their expansion and rotation. We derive homogeneous 3D kinematics for 15 MC complexes within 2.5 kpc. YSOs and OCs exhibit strongly consistent kinematics, with a median spatial velocity offset of $\simeq 2$ km s$^{-1}$, confirming that both populations trace the bulk motion of their parent clouds. The resulting cloud kinematics show a median peculiar velocity of $\simeq 8.7$ km s$^{-1}$ with respect to Galactic rotation. We trace back the Solar System's voyage through the Orion cloud and the common origin of Lupus, Ophiuchus, and Corona Australis in Sco-Cen. Internally, we detect significant expansion in Orion and Ophiuchus ($5σ$) and coherent rotation in at least seven complexes.

📬 Weekly AI Paper Digest

Get the top 10 AI/ML arXiv papers from the week — summarized, scored, and delivered to your inbox every Monday.