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We present a multi-wavelength investigation of a large-scale physical system containing the W33 complex. The extended system (~50 pc x 37 pc) is selected based on the distribution of molecular gas at [29.6, 60.2] km/s and of 88 ATLASGAL 870 micron dust clumps at d ~2.6 kpc. The extended system/molecular cloud traced in the maps of 13CO and C18O emission contains several HII regions excited by OB stars (age ~0.3-1.0 Myr) and a thermally supercritical filament (fs1, length ~17 pc). The filament, devoid of the ionized gas, shows dust temperature (T_d) of ~19 K, while the HII regions are depicted with T_d of ~21-29 K. It suggests the existence of two distinct environments in the cloud. The distribution of Class I young stellar objects (mean age ~0.44 Myr) traces the early stage of star formation (SF) toward the cloud. At least three velocity components (around 35, 45, and 53 km/s) are investigated toward the system. The analysis of 13CO and C18O reveals the spatial and velocity connections of cloud components around 35 and 53 km/s. The observed positions of previously known sources, W33 Main, W33 A and O4-7I stars, are found toward a complementary distribution of these two cloud components. The filament fs1 and a previously known object W33 B are seen toward the overlapping areas of the clouds, where ongoing SF activity is evident. A scenario concerning the converging/colliding flows from two different velocity components appears to explain well the observed signposts of SF activities in the system.
Rich in HII regions, giant molecular clouds are natural laboratories to study massive stars and sequential star formation. The Galactic star forming complex W33 is located at l=~12.8deg and at a distance of 2.4 kpc, has a size of ~10 pc and a total m
Young massive (M >10^4 Msun) stellar clusters are a good laboratory to study the evolution of massive stars. Only a dozen of such clusters are known in the Galaxy. Here we report about a new young massive stellar cluster in the Milky Way. Near-infrar
The Milky Way is surrounded by dozens of ultra-faint (< $10^5$ solar luminosities) dwarf satellite galaxies. They are the surviving remnants of the earliest galaxies, as confirmed by their ancient (~13 billion years old) and chemically primitive star
To observationally explore physical processes, we present a multi-wavelength study of a wide-scale environment toward l = 13.7 - 14.9 degrees containing a mid-infrared bubble N14. The analysis of 12CO, 13CO, and C18O gas at [31.6, 46] km/s reveals an
We present the widest-field resolved stellar map to date of the closest ($Dsim3.8$ Mpc) massive elliptical galaxy NGC 5128 (Centaurus A; Cen A), extending out to a projected galactocentric radius of $sim150$ kpc. The dataset is part of our ongoing Pa