The JCMT Plane Survey : First complete data release - emission maps and compact source catalogue

Eden, D.~J., Moore, T. J. T., Plume, R., Urquhart, J.S., Thompson, M. A., Parsons, H., Dempsey, J. T., Rigby, A.~J., Morgan, L. K., Thomas, H. S., Berry, D J, Buckle, J., Brunt, Christopher M., Butner, H. M., Carretero, D., Chrysostomou, A., Currie, M. J., deVilliers, H.~M., Fich, M., Gibb, A. G., Hoare, M.G., Jenness, T., Manser, G., Mottram, J.~C., Natario, C., Olguin, F., Peretto, N., Pestalozzi, M., Polychroni, D., Redman, R.~O., Salji, C., Summers, L.~J., Tahani, K., Traficante, A., diFrancesco, J., Evans, A., Fuller, G. A., Johnstone, D., Joncas, G., Longmore, S.~N., Martin, Gary P, Richer, J. S., Weferling, B., White, Glenn J. and Zhu, M. (2017) The JCMT Plane Survey : First complete data release - emission maps and compact source catalogue. pp. 2163-2183. ISSN 0035-8711
Copy

We present the first data release of the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) Plane Survey (JPS), the JPS Public Release 1 (JPSPR1). JPS is an 850-um continuum survey of six fields in the northern inner Galactic Plane in a longitude range of l=7-63, made with the Sub-millimetre Common-User Bolometer Array 2 (SCUBA-2). This first data release consists of emission maps of the six JPS regions with an average pixel-to-pixel noise of 7.19 mJy beam^-1, when smoothed over the beam, and a compact-source catalogue containing 7,813 sources. The 95 per cent completeness limits of the catalogue are estimated at 0.04 Jy beam^-1 and 0.3 Jy for the peak and integrated flux densities, respectively. The emission contained in the compact-source catalogue is 42 +- 5 per cent of the total and, apart from the large-scale (greater than 8') emission, there is excellent correspondence with features in the 500-um Herschel maps. We find that, with two-dimensional matching, 98 +- 2 per cent of sources within the fields centred at l=20, 30, 40 and 50 are associated with molecular clouds, with 91 +- 3 per cent of the l=30 and 40 sources associated with dense molecular clumps. Matching the JPS catalogue to Herschel 70-um sources, we find that 38 +- 1 per cent of sources show evidence of ongoing star formation. The images and catalogue will be a valuable resource for studies of star formation in the Galaxy and the role of environment and spiral arms in the star formation process.

picture_as_pdf

picture_as_pdf
stx874.pdf
Available under Creative Commons: 4.0

View Download

Atom BibTeX OpenURL ContextObject in Span OpenURL ContextObject Dublin Core MPEG-21 DIDL EndNote HTML Citation METS MODS RIOXX2 XML Reference Manager Refer ASCII Citation
Export

Downloads