The Astronomical Journal (Jan 2022)

The Cassiopeia Filament: A Blown Spur of the Local Arm

  • Xuepeng Chen,
  • Li Sun,
  • Jiancheng Feng,
  • Shiyu Zhang,
  • Weihua Guo,
  • Xiaoyun Xu,
  • Yang Su,
  • Yan Sun,
  • Shaobo Zhang,
  • Xin Zhou,
  • Zhiwei Chen,
  • Qing-Zeng Yan,
  • Miaomiao Zhang,
  • Min Fang,
  • Ji Yang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ac9ea2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 165, no. 1
p. 16

Abstract

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We present wide-field and high-sensitivity CO(1–0) molecular line observations toward the Cassiopeia region, using the 13.7 m millimeter telescope of the Purple Mountain Observatory. The CO observations reveal a large-scale highly filamentary molecular cloud within the Galactic region of 132.°0 ≥ l ≥ 122.°0 and −1.°0 ≤ b ≤ 3.°0 and the velocity range from approximately +1 to +4 km s ^−1 . The measured length of the large-scale filament, referred to as the Cassiopeia Filament, is ∼390 pc. The observed properties of the Cassiopeia Filament, such as length, column density, and velocity gradient, are consistent with those synthetic large-scale filaments in the inter-arm regions. Based on its observed properties and location on the Galactic plane, we suggest that the Cassiopeia Filament is a spur of the Local arm, which is formed due to the galactic shear. The western end of the Cassiopeia Filament shows a giant arc-like molecular gas shell, which extends in the velocity range from roughly −1 to +7 km s ^−1 . Finger-like structures, with systematic velocity gradients, are detected in the shell. The CO kinematics suggest that the large shell is expanding at a velocity of ∼6.5 km s ^−1 . Both the shell and finger-like structures outline a giant bubble with a radius of ∼16 pc, which is likely produced by the stellar wind from the progenitor star of a supernova remnant. The observed spectral line widths suggest that the whole Cassiopeia Filament was quiescent initially until its west part was blown by the stellar wind and became supersonically turbulent.

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