Star Formation in the Trifid Nebula
B. Lefloch (1), J. Cernicharo (1, 2), J.R. Pardo (2) ((1) LAOG,, Grenoble, France (2) DAMIR, CSIC, Madrid, Spain)

TL;DR
This study maps the molecular and dust emission in the Trifid Nebula, revealing filamentary structures, star-forming cores, and the influence of external factors like supernova remnants on star formation processes.
Contribution
It provides detailed observations of the filamentary molecular cloud structure and star formation activity in the Trifid Nebula, highlighting the role of pre-existing filaments and external triggers.
Findings
Filaments are fragmented dense gas structures with star-forming cores.
33 cores identified, 16 actively forming stars.
Supernova remnant W28 may have triggered star formation.
Abstract
We have obtained maps of the 1.25mm thermal dust emission and the molecular gas emission over a region of 20' by 10' arcmin around the Trifid Nebula (M20), with the IRAM 30m and the CSO telescopes as well as in the mid-infrared wavelength with ISO and SPITZER. Our survey is sensitive to features down to N(H2) \sim 10^{22} cm-2 in column density. The cloud material is distributed in fragmented dense gas filaments (n(H2) \sim 1000 cm-3) with sizes ranging from 1 to 10 pc. A massive filament, WF, with properties typical of Infra Red Dark Clouds, connects M20 to the W28 supernova remnant. These filaments pre-exist the formation of the Trifid and were originally self-gravitating. The fragments produced are very massive (100 Msun or more) and are the progenitors of the cometary globules observed at the border of the HII region. We could identify 33 cores, 16 of which are currently forming…
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.
