The Initial Conditions of Clustered Star Formation. II. N2H+ Observations of the Ophiuchus B Core
R. K. Friesen, J. Di Francesco, Y. Shimajiri, S. Takakuwa

TL;DR
This study maps N2H+ emission in the Oph B star-forming core, comparing it with NH3 and continuum data, revealing insights into core kinematics, chemical abundances, and small-scale structures relevant to clustered star formation.
Contribution
It provides the first combined N2H+ and NH3 observations of Oph B, highlighting differences in kinematics and chemistry, and identifying small-scale structures and potential N2H+ depletion zones.
Findings
Non-thermal motions dominate in Oph B2, remain transonic at high densities.
N2H+ line widths are narrower than NH3, indicating they trace different material.
N2H+ abundance decreases with increasing H2 column density.
Abstract
We present a Nobeyama 45 m Radio Telescope map and Australia Telescope Compact Array pointed observations of N2H+ 1-0 emission towards the clustered, low mass star forming Oph B Core within the Ophiuchus molecular cloud. We compare these data with previously published results of high resolution NH3 (1,1) and (2,2) observations in Oph B. We use 3D Clumpfind to identify emission features in the single-dish N2H+ map, and find that the N2H+ `clumps' match well similar features previously identified in NH3 (1,1) emission, but are frequently offset to clumps identified at similar resolution in 850 micron continuum emission. Wide line widths in the Oph B2 sub-Core indicate non-thermal motions dominate the Core kinematics, and remain transonic at densities n ~ 3 x 10^5 cm^-3 with large scatter and no trend with N(H2). Non-thermal motions in Oph B1 and B3 are subsonic with little variation, but…
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