Abstract

The fragmentation of gaseous spiral arms in the outer Galaxy into superclouds has been studied using recently published data on the HI distribution in the Galactic disk. Regular chains of superclouds have been found or confirmed in the Cygnus (Outer) and Carina arms, with the spacings between the superclouds being concentrated near 0.1 and 0.2 of the solar Galactocentric distance. The star complexes in the northwestern arm of the galaxy M31 are spaced, on average, 1.2 kpc apart, with the most distinct chain of complexes being located in the arm region where Beck et al. (1989) detected a strong and wavy (along the arm) magnetic field. Its wavelength turns out to be related to the spacing between the complexes. In this arm, the HII regions lie inside the star complexes, which, in turn, are located inside the gas-dust lane. In contrast, the southwestern arm of M31 is split into a gas-dust lane and a dense stellar arm, which is not fragmented into star complexes. Here, the HII regions are located along the boundary between the gas-dust and stellar components of the arm; other evidence for the presence of a spiral shock wave triggering star formation is also observed, which is probably attributable to the large pitch angle of this segment of the southwestern arm. It may be suggested that the shock wave rapidly leads to star formation everywhere in this arm, while in the northwestern arm, where the shock wave is absent, star formation begins in the superclouds formed along the arm by the magneto-gravitational instability. This is how the chains of star complexes in the northwestern arm of M31 and, obviously, the chains of superclouds in the Carina and Cygnus arms of our Galaxy have been formed. The detection of a regularmagnetic field in the corresponding segments of these arms can be predicted.

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