No Arabic abstract
LHA 115-N 83 (N83) and LHA 115-N 84 (N84) are HII regions associated with the early stage of star formation located in the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC). We have analyzed the new HI data taken with the Galactic Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder survey project at a high angular resolution of 30. We found that the two clouds, having $sim$40 km s$^{-1}$ velocity separation, show complementary distribution with each other, and part of the HI gas is dispersed by the ionization. In addition, the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array observations revealed clumpy CO clouds of 10$^{5}$ $M_{odot}$ in total over an extent of 100 pc, which are also well correlated with the HII regions. There is a hint of displacement between the two complementary components, which indicate that the red-shifted HI cloud is moving from the north to the south by $sim$100 pc. This motion is similar to what is found in NGC 602 (Fukui et al. 2020), suggesting a large scale systematic gas flow. We frame a scenario that the two components collided with each other and triggered the formation of N83, N84, and six O-type stars around them in a time scale of a few Myr ($sim$60 pc / 40 km s$^{-1}$). The supersonic motion compressed the HI gas to form the CO clouds in the red-shifted HI cloud, some of which are forming O-type stars ionizing the HII regions in the last Myr. The red-shifted HI cloud probably flows to the direction of the Magellanic Bridge. The velocity field originated by the close encounter of the SMC with the Large Magellanic Cloud 200 Myr ago as proposed by Fujimoto & Noguchi (1990).
NGC 602 is an outstanding young open cluster in the Small Magellanic Cloud. We have analyzed the new HI data taken with the Galactic Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder survey project at an angular resolution of 30. The results show that there are three velocity components in the NGC 602 region. We found that two of them having ~20 km s$^{-1}$ velocity separation show complementary spatial distribution with a displacement of 147 pc. We present a scenario that the two clouds collided with each other and triggered the formation of NGC 602 and eleven O stars. The average time scale of the collision is estimated to be ~8 Myr, while the collision may have continued over a few Myr. The red shifted HI cloud extending ~500 pc flows possibly to the Magellanic Bridge, which was driven by the close encounter with the Large Magellanic Cloud 200 Myr ago (Fujimoto & Noguchi 1990; Muller & Bekki 2007). Along with the RMC136 and LHA 120-N 44 regions the present results lend support for that the galaxy interaction played a role in forming high-mass stars and clusters.
The galactic tidal interaction is a possible mechanism to trigger the active star formation in galaxies. Recent analyses using the Hi data in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) proposed that the tidally driven colliding HI flows, induced by the galactic interaction with the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC), triggered high-mass star formation in the southeastern HI Ridge, including R136 and $sim$400 O/WR stars, and the galactic center region hosting the N44 region. This study performed a comprehensive HI data analysis across the LMC and found that two Hi velocity components defined in the early studies (L- and D- components) are quasi-ubiquitous with signatures of interaction dynamically toward the other prominent HII regions, such as N11 and N79. We characterize the intimidate velocity range (I-component) between the two components as the decelerated gas by momentum conservation in the collisional interaction. The spatial distributions of the I-component and those of the O/WR stars have good agreements with each other whose fraction is more than $sim$70% at a scale of $sim$15 pc, which is significantly smaller than the typical GMC size. Based on the results of our new simulations of the LMC-SMC interaction, we propose that the interaction about 0.2 Gyr ago induced efficient infall of gas from the SMC to the LMC and consequently ended up with recent formation of high-mass stars due to collisions of HI gas in the LMC. The new numerical simulations of the gas dynamics successfully reproduce the current distribution of the L-component. This lends theoretical support for the present picture.
Understanding of massive cluster formation is one of the important issues of astronomy. By analyzing the HI data, we have identified that the two HI velocity components (L- and D-components) are colliding toward the HI Ridge, in the southeastern end of the LMC, which hosts the young massive cluster R136 and $sim$400 O/WR stars (Doran et al. 2013) including the progenitor of SN1987A. The collision is possibly evidenced by bridge features connecting the two HI components and complementary distributions between them. We frame a hypothesis that the collision triggered the formation of R136 and the surrounding high-mass stars as well as the HI & Molecular Ridge. Fujimoto & Noguchi (1990) advocated that the last tidal interaction between the LMC and the SMC about 0.2 Gyr ago induced collision of the L- and D-components. This model is consistent with numerical simulations (Bekki & Chiba 2007b). We suggest that a dense HI partly CO cloud of 10$^{6}$ $M_{odot}$, a precursor of R136, was formed at the shock-compressed interface between the colliding L- and D-components. We suggest that part of the low-metalicity gas from the SMC was mixed in the tidal interaction based on the $Planck/IRAS$ data of dust optical depth (Planck Collaboration et al. 2014).
Stellar feedback, expanding HII regions, wind-blown bubbles, and supernovae are thought to be important triggering mechanisms of star formation. Stellar associations, being hosts of significant numbers of early-type stars, are the loci where these mechanisms act. In this part of our photometric study of the star-forming region NGC346/N66 in the Small Magellanic Cloud, we present evidence based on previous and recent detailed studies, that it hosts at least two different events of triggered star formation and we reveal the complexity of its recent star formation history. In our earlier studies of this region (Papers I, III) we find that besides the central part of N66, where the bright OB stellar content of the association NGC346 is concentrated, an arc-like nebular feature, north of the association, hosts recent star formation. This feature is characterized by a high concentration of emission-line stars and Young Stellar Objects, as well as embedded sources seen as IR-emission peaks that coincide with young compact clusters of low-mass pre-main sequence stars. All these objects indicate that the northern arc of N66 encompasses the most current star formation event in the region. We present evidence that this star formation is the product of a different mechanism than that in the general area of the association, and that it is triggered by a wind-driven expanding HII region (or bubble) blown by a massive supernova progenitor, and possibly other bright stars, a few Myr ago. We propose a scenario according to which this mechanism triggered star formation away from the bar of N66, while in the bar of N66 star formation is introduced by the photo-ionizing OB stars of the association itself.
N44 is the second active site of high mass star formation next to R136 in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC). We carried out a detailed analysis of HI at 60 arcsec resolution by using the ATCA & Parkes data. We presented decomposition of the HI emission into two velocity components (the L- and D-components) with the velocity separation of 60 km s$^{-1}$. In addition, we newly defined the I-component whose velocity is intermediate between the L- and D-components. The D-component was used to derive the rotation curve of the LMC disk, which is consistent with the stellar rotation curve (Alves et al. 2000). Toward the active cluster forming region of LHA 120-N 44, the three velocity components of HI gas show signatures of dynamical interaction including bridges and complementary spatial distributions. We hypothesize that the L- and D-components have been colliding with each other since 5 Myrs ago and the interaction triggered formation of the O and early B stars ionizing N44. In the hypothesis the I-component is interpreted as decelerated gas in terms of momentum exchange in the collisional interaction of the L- and D-components. In the N44 region the Planck sub-mm dust optical depth is correlated with the HI intensity, which is well approximated by a linear regression. We found that the N44 region shows a significantly steeper regression line than in the Bar region indicating less dust abundance in the N44 region, which is ascribed to the tidal interaction between the LMC with the SMC 0.2 Gyrs ago.