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We present $^{12}$CO, $^{13}$CO, and C$^{18}$O data as the next major release for the CHaMP project, an unbiased sample of Galactic molecular clouds in $l$ = 280$^{circ}$-300$^{circ}$. From a radiative transfer analysis, we self-consistently compute 3D cubes of optical depth, excitation temperature, and column density for $sim$300 massive clumps, and update the $I_{rm CO}$-dependent CO$rightarrow$H$_2$ conversion law of Barnes et al (2015). For $N$ $propto$ $I^p$, we find $p$ = 1.92$pm$0.05 for the velocity-resolved conversion law aggregated over all clumps. A practical, integrated conversion law is $N_{rm CO}$ = (4.0$pm$0.3)$times$10$^{19}$m$^{-2}$ $I_{rm CO}^{1.27pm0.02}$, confirming an overall 2$times$ higher total molecular mass for Milky Way clouds, compared to the standard $X$ factor. We use these laws to compare the kinematics of clump interiors with their foreground $^{12}$CO envelopes, and find evidence that most clumps are not dynamically uniform: irregular portions seem to be either slowly accreting onto the interiors, or dispersing from them. We compute the spatially-resolved mass accretion/dispersal rate across all clumps, and map the local flow timescale. While these flows are not clearly correlated with clump structures, the inferred accretion rate is a statistically strong function of the local mass surface density $Sigma$, suggesting near-exponential growth or loss of mass over effective timescales $sim$30-50 Myr. At high enough $Sigma$, accretion dominates, suggesting gravity plays an important role in both processes. If confirmed by numerical simulations, this sedimentation picture would support arguments for long clump lifetimes mediated by pressure confinement, with a terminal crescendo of star formation, suggesting a resolution to the 40-yr-old puzzle of the dynamical state of molecular clouds and their low star formation efficiency.
We report the second complete molecular line data release from the {em Census of High- and Medium-mass Protostars} (CHaMP), a large-scale, unbiased, uniform mapping survey at sub-parsec resolution, of mm-wave line emission from 303 massive, dense mol
We present the second dust continuum data release in the Census of High- and Medium-mass Protostars (CHaMP), expanding the methodology trialed in Pitts et al. 2019 to the entire CHaMP survey area ($280^{circ}<l<300^{circ}$, $-4^{circ}<b<+2^{circ}$).
The Census of High- and Medium-mass Protostars (CHaMP) is the first large-scale, unbiased, uniform mapping survey at sub-parsec scale resolution of 90 GHz line emission from massive molecular clumps in the Milky Way. We present the first Mopra (ATNF)
(Abridged) The initial physical conditions of high-mass stars and protoclusters remain poorly characterized. To this end we present the first targeted ALMA 1.3mm continuum and spectral line survey towards high-mass starless clump candidates, selectin
The evolution of molecular clouds in galactic centres is thought to differ from that in galactic discs due to a significant influence of the external gravitational potential. We present a set of numerical simulations of molecular clouds orbiting on t