Candidate Rotating Toroids around High-Mass (Proto)Stars
R. S. Furuya, R. Cesaroni, S. Takahashi, C. Codella, M. Momose, and M., T. Beltran

TL;DR
This study investigates candidate rotating toroids around high-mass (proto)stars, revealing that these cores are likely rotating structures with outflows, but rotation is less prominent than in similar known objects, due to observational limitations.
Contribution
First detailed analysis of candidate rotating toroids around high-mass (proto)stars using multi-array observations, highlighting their potential rotation and physical state.
Findings
Detection of molecular outflows in all three cores.
Velocity gradients suggest rotation roughly perpendicular to outflows.
Cores are close to virial equilibrium, supported by turbulence.
Abstract
Using the OVRO, Nobeyama, and IRAM mm-arrays, we searched for ``disk''-outflow systems in three high-mass (proto)star forming regions: G16.59-0.05, G23.01-0.41, and G28.87+0.07. These were selected from a sample of NH3 cores associated with OH and H2O maser emission and with no or very faint continuum emission. Our imaging of molecular line (including rotational transitions of CH3CN and 3mm dust continuum emission revealed that these are compact, massive, and hot molecular cores (HMCs), that is likely sites of high-mass star formation prior to the appearance of UCHII regions. All three sources turn out to be associated with molecular outflows from CO and/or HCO+ J=1--0 line imaging. In addition, velocity gradients of 10 -- 100 km/s per pc in the innermost densest regions of the G23.01 and G28.87 HMCs are identified along directions roughly perpendicular to the axes of the corresponding…
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