Dense Cores in Perseus: The Influence of Stellar Content and Cluster Environment
Jonathan B. Foster, Erik W. Rosolowsky, Jens Kauffman, Jaime E., Pineda, Michelle A. Borkin, Paola Caselli, Phil C. Myers, Alyssa A. Goodman

TL;DR
This study analyzes dense cores in the Perseus Molecular cloud, revealing how stellar content and cluster environment influence core properties, with implications for star formation theories.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison of core properties based on stellar and environmental factors, highlighting that these influences are less significant than previously assumed.
Findings
Cores in clusters have higher temperatures and lower CCS/NH3 abundances.
Protostellar cores show higher temperatures, densities, and masses.
Most cores are gravitationally bound regardless of environment or stellar content.
Abstract
We present the chemistry, temperature, and dynamical state of a sample of 193 dense cores or core candidates in the Perseus Molecular cloud and compare the properties of cores associated with young stars and clusters with those which are not. The combination of our NH3 and CCS observations with previous millimeter, sub-millimeter, and Spitzer data available for this cloud enable us both to determine core properties precisely and to accurately classify cores as starless or protostellar. The properties of cores in different cluster environments and before-and-after star formation provide important constraints on simulations of star-formation, particularly under the paradigm that the essence of star formation is set by the turbulent formation of prestellar cores. We separate the influence of stellar content from that of cluster environment and find that cores within clusters have (1)…
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