Star-forming cores embedded in a massive cold clump: Fragmentation, collapse and energetic outflows
Martin Hennemann, Stephan M. Birkmann, Oliver Krause, Dietrich Lemke,, Yaroslav Pavlyuchenkov, Surhud More, Thomas Henning (MPIA Heidelberg,, Germany)

TL;DR
This study investigates the early stages of star formation in a massive cold clump, revealing fragmentation into cores with outflows and infall, providing insights into initial conditions for high-mass star formation.
Contribution
It presents detailed observations of a massive cold clump, identifying core fragmentation, outflows, and infall, and compares these findings with simulations of massive core collapse.
Findings
Fragmentation into two cores with different properties.
Detection of collimated outflows and turbulence levels.
Estimated mass infall and outflow rates consistent with early star formation stages.
Abstract
The fate of massive cold clumps, their internal structure and collapse need to be characterised to understand the initial conditions for the formation of high-mass stars, stellar systems, and the origin of associations and clusters. We explore the onset of star formation in the 75 M_sun SMM1 clump in the region ISOSS J18364-0221 using infrared and (sub-)millimetre observations including interferometry. This contracting clump has fragmented into two compact cores SMM1 North and South of 0.05 pc radius, having masses of 15 and 10 M_sun, and luminosities of 20 and 180 L_sun. SMM1 South harbours a source traced at 24 and 70um, drives an energetic molecular outflow, and appears supersonically turbulent at the core centre. SMM1 North has no infrared counterparts and shows lower levels of turbulence, but also drives an outflow. Both outflows appear collimated and parsec-scale near-infrared…
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