Low-velocity large-scale shocks in the infrared dark cloud G035.39-00.33: Bubble-driven cloud-cloud collisions
Journal article, 2025

Context. Low-velocity, large-scale shocks impacting on the interstellar medium have been suggested as efficient mechanisms that shape molecular clouds and trigger star formation within them. Aims. These shocks, both driven by galactic bubbles and/or cloud-cloud collisions, leave specific signatures in the morphology and kinematics of the gas. Observational studies of such signatures are crucial to investigate if and how shocks affect the clouds formation process and trigger their future star formation. Methods. We have analysed the shocked and dense gas tracers SiO(2−1) and H13 CO+(1−0) emission towards the Infrared Dark Cloud G035.39-00.33, using new, larger-scale maps obtained with the 30 m telescope at the Instituto de Radioastronomía Millimétrica. Results. We find that the dense gas is organised into a northern filament and a southern one that have different velocities and tilted orientations with respect to each other. The two filaments, seen in H13 CO+, are spatially separated yet connected by a faint bridge-like feature also seen in a position-velocity diagram extracted across the cloud. This bridge feature, typical of cloud-cloud collisions, also coincides with a very spectrally narrow SiO-traced gas emission. We suggest that the northern filament is interacting with the nearby supernova remnant G035.6-0.4. Towards the southern filament, we also report the presence of a parsec-scale, spectrally narrow SiO emission likely driven by the interaction between this filament and a nearby expanding shell. The shell is visible in the 1.3 GHz and 610 MHz continuum images and our preliminary analysis suggests it may be the relic of a supernova remnant. Conclusions. We conclude that the two filaments represent the densest part of two colliding clouds, pushed towards each other by nearby supernova remnants. We speculate that this cloud-cloud collision driven by stellar feedback may have assembled the infrared dark cloud. We also evaluate the possibility that star formation may have been triggered within G035.39-00.33 by the cloud-cloud collision.

ISM: clouds

ISM: supernova remnants

ISM: bubbles

ISM: molecules

ISM: individual objects: G035.39-00.33

Author

Giuliana Cosentino

Institut de Radioastronomie Millimétrique (IRAM)

I. Jimenez-Serra

Centro de Astrobiologia (CAB)

R. Liu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

Chi-Yan Law

Arcetri Astrophysical Observatory

Jonathan Tan

University of Virginia

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment

Jonathan D. Henshaw

Liverpool John Moores University

Ashley T. Barnes

European Southern Observatory (ESO)

Francesco Fontani

Max Planck Society

Paris Observatory

Arcetri Astrophysical Observatory

P. Caselli

Max Planck Society

Serena Viti

Leiden University

Astronomy and Astrophysics

0004-6361 (ISSN) 1432-0746 (eISSN)

Vol. 701 A244

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Fusion, Plasma and Space Physics

Astronomy, Astrophysics, and Cosmology

Meteorology and Atmospheric Sciences

DOI

10.1051/0004-6361/202556057

More information

Latest update

10/9/2025