Fragmentation and mass segregation in the massive dense cores of Cygnus X
S. Bontemps, F. Motte, T. Csengeri, N. Schneider

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution interferometry to analyze fragmentation and mass segregation in dense cores of Cygnus X, revealing a mix of low- and high-mass protostellar objects and suggesting primordial mass segregation during cluster formation.
Contribution
It provides detailed observational evidence of core fragmentation and mass distribution, highlighting the role of self-gravity in primordial mass segregation in massive star-forming regions.
Findings
23 fragments within 6 cores, with some likely precursors of OB stars
Fragmentation levels higher than monolithic collapse, but lower than pure turbulence models
Evidence of primordial mass segregation in dense cores
Abstract
We present Plateau de Bure interferometer observations obtained in continuum at 1.3 and 3.5 mm towards the six most massive and young (IR-quiet) dense cores in Cygnus X. Located at only 1.7 kpc, the Cygnus X region offers the opportunity of reaching small enough scales (of the order of 1700 AU at 1.3 mm) to separate individual collapsing objects. The cores are sub-fragmented with a total of 23 fragments inside 5 cores. Only the most compact core, CygX-N63, could actually be a single massive protostar with an envelope mass as large as 60 Msun. The fragments in the other cores have sizes and separations similar to low-mass pre-stellar and proto-stellar condensations in nearby protoclusters, and are probably of the same nature. A total of 9 out of these 23 protostellar objects are found to be probable precursors of OB stars with envelope masses ranging from 6 to 23 Msun. The level of…
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