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We derive the mass-radius relation and mass function of molecular clumps in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) and interpret them in terms of the simple feedback model proposed by Fall, Krumholz, and Matzner (FKM). Our work utilizes the dendrogram-based catalog of clumps compiled by Wong et al. from $^{12}$CO and $^{13}$CO maps of six giant molecular clouds in the LMC observed with the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA). The Magellanic Clouds are the only external galaxies for which this type of analysis is possible at the necessary spatial resolution ($sim1$ pc). We find that the mass-radius relation and mass function of LMC clumps have power-law forms, $R propto M^{alpha}$ and $dN/dM propto M^{beta}$, with indices $alpha = 0.36 pm 0.03$ and $beta= -1.8 pm 0.1 $ over the mass ranges $10^2 M_odot lesssim M lesssim 10^5 M_odot$ and $10^2 M_odot lesssim M lesssim 10^4 M_odot$, respectively. With these values of $alpha$ and $beta$ for the clumps (i.e., protoclusters), the predicted index for the mass function of young LMC clusters from the FKM model is $beta approx 1.7$, in good agreement with the observed index. The situation portrayed here for clumps and clusters in the LMC replicates that in the Milky Way.
The Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), the closest star forming galaxy with low metallicity, provides an ideal laboratory to study star formation in such an environment. The classical dense molecular gas thermometer NH3 is rarely available in a low metall
We review the complications involved in the conversion of stellar luminosities into masses and apply a range of mass-to-luminosity relations to our Hubble Space Telescope observations of the young LMC star clusters NGC 1805 and NGC 1818. Both the r
Young stellar clusters across nearly five orders of magnitude in mass appear to follow a power-law mass-radius relationship (MRR), $R_{star} propto M_{star}^{alpha}$, with $alpha approx 0.2 - 0.33$. We develop a simple analytic model for the cluster
We report the results of a sensitive search for 12.2 GHz methanol maser emission towards a sample of eight high-mass star formation regions in the Large Magellanic Clouds which have been detected in other maser transitions. We detected one source tow
We used resolved star counts from Hubble Space Telescope images to determine the center of gravity and the projected density profiles of 6 old globular clusters in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), namely NGC 1466, NGC 1841, NGC 1898, NGC 2210, NGC 2