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The Radio Ammonia Mid-Plane Survey (RAMPS)

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posted on 2025-05-13, 15:09 authored by Taylor Hogge, James Jackson, Ian Stephens, Scott Whittaker, Jonathan Foster, Matthew Camarata, D. Anish Roshi, James Di Francesco, Steven Longmore, Robert Loughnane, Toby Moore, Jill Rathborne, Patricio Sanhueza, Andrew Walsh
The Radio Ammonia Mid-Plane Survey (RAMPS) is a Galactic plane molecular line survey in the 1st quadrant of the Milky Way. We perform RAMPS observations with the 100-meter Green Bank Telescope in Green Bank, West Virginia. The purpose of RAMPS is to provide a large sample of dense molecular clumps to help us better understand the formation of high-mass stars. RAMPS primarily targets the NH3(1,1)-(5,5) inversion transitions, which trace dense gas, and the H2O maser transition at 22.235 GHz, which traces sites of active star formation. RAMPS has completed its pilot survey, having mapped 6.5 degrees2 in fields centered at Galactic longitudes l = 10˚, 23˚, 24˚, 28˚, 29˚, 30˚, 31˚, 38˚, 45˚, and 47˚. The pilot data is comprised of 6 zip files, each representing a contiguous portion of the pilot survey. Each zip file then contains 26 FITS files, which consist of the processed data cubes of NH3(1,1), (2,2), and H2O, maps of the zeroth and first moment for these lines, maps of the NH3(1,1) optical depth, the NH3 rotational temperature, the total NH3 column density, the NH3 line width, the velocity, and the filling fraction. The RAMPS project is funded by the National Science Foundation.

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University of Newcastle

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  • en, English

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This data is available under the CC BY-SA Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International licence. This licence lets others distribute, remix and build upon the work, even for commercial purposes, as long as they credit the original creator/s (and any other nominated parties) and license any new creations based on the work under the same terms. All new derivative works will carry the same licence, so will also allow commercial use. Data is available to all requesters via mediated access. Please contact researchdata@newcastle.edu.au to access the data.

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