TMC-1C: an accreting starless core
S. Schnee, P. Caselli, A. Goodman, H. G. Arce, J. Ballesteros-Paredes,, and K. Kuchibhotla

TL;DR
This study maps the starless core TMC-1C, revealing extended infall motions, temperature and density gradients, and chemical depletion patterns, suggesting ongoing accretion and an evolutionary stage older than 300,000 years.
Contribution
It provides detailed observational evidence of infall and chemical structure in TMC-1C, highlighting its extended infall region and chemical evolution in a starless core.
Findings
Extended infall region of ~7,000 AU observed in N2H+
Temperature drops from 12 K to 10 K away from the center
Similar depletion factors for N2H+ and CO (~<6)
Abstract
We have mapped the starless core TMC-1C in a variety of molecular lines with the IRAM 30m telescope. High density tracers show clear signs of self-absorption and sub-sonic infall asymmetries are present in N2H+ (1-0) and DCO+ (2-1) lines. The inward velocity profile in N2H+ (1-0) is extended over a region of about 7,000 AU in radius around the dust continuum peak, which is the most extended ``infalling'' region observed in a starless core with this tracer. The kinetic temperature (~12 K) measured from C17O and C18O suggests that their emission comes from a shell outside the colder interior traced by the mm continuum dust. The C18O (2-1) excitation temperature drops from 12 K to ~10 K away from the center. This is consistent with a volume density drop of the gas traced by the C18O lines, from ~4x10^4 cm^-3 towards the dust peak to ~6x10^3 cm^-3 at a projected distance from the dust peak…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
