We present an overview of the first data release (DR1) and first-look science
from the Green Bank Ammonia Survey (GAS). GAS is a Large Program at the Green
Bank Telescope to map all Gould Belt star-forming regions with AV≳7
mag visible from the northern hemisphere in emission from NH3 and other key
molecular tracers. This first release includes the data for four regions in
Gould Belt clouds: B18 in Taurus, NGC 1333 in Perseus, L1688 in Ophiuchus, and
Orion A North in Orion. We compare the NH3 emission to dust continuum
emission from Herschel, and find that the two tracers correspond closely.
NH3 is present in over 60\% of lines-of-sight with AV≳7 mag in
three of the four DR1 regions, in agreement with expectations from previous
observations. The sole exception is B18, where NH3 is detected toward ~ 40\%
of lines-of-sight with AV≳7 mag. Moreover, we find that the NH3
emission is generally extended beyond the typical 0.1 pc length scales of dense
cores. We produce maps of the gas kinematics, temperature, and NH3 column
densities through forward modeling of the hyperfine structure of the NH3
(1,1) and (2,2) lines. We show that the NH3 velocity dispersion,
σv, and gas kinetic temperature, TK, vary systematically between
the regions included in this release, with an increase in both the mean value
and spread of σv and TK with increasing star formation activity.
The data presented in this paper are publicly available.Comment: 33 pages, 27 figures, accepted to ApJS. Datasets are publicly
available: https://dataverse.harvard.edu/dataverse/GAS_DR