Dynamic star formation in the massive DR21 filament
N. Schneider (1), T. Csengeri (1), S. Bontemps (2), F. Motte (1), R., Simon (3), P. Hennebelle (4), C. Federrath (5), R. Klessen (5,6) ((1), IRFU/SAp CEA-Saclay, France (2) OASU Bordeaux, France (3) I.Physik. Institut, Koeln, Germany (4) Obs. de Paris

TL;DR
This study investigates the complex dynamics of the DR21 filament, revealing signs of global gravitational collapse, infall motions, and flow convergence, supporting a collapse-driven star formation scenario in a massive, dense region.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence for global gravitational collapse in the DR21 filament, combining molecular line data and modeling to distinguish between collapse and equilibrium states.
Findings
Lower velocity dispersion in dense cores compared to surrounding gas
Detection of infall signatures along the filament
Massive clumps are gravitationally contracting
Abstract
The formation of massive stars is a highly complex process in which it is not clear whether the star-forming gas is in global gravitational collapse or in an equilibrium state, supported by turbulence. By studying one of the most massive and dense star-forming regions in the Galaxy at a distance of less than 3 kpc, the filament containing the well-known sources DR21 and DR21(OH), we expect to find observational signatures that allow to discriminate between the two views. We use molecular line data from our 13CO 1-0, CS 2-1, and N2H+ 1-0 survey of the Cygnus X region obtained with the FCRAO and high-angular resolution observations of CO, CS, HCO+, N2H+, and H2CO, obtained with the IRAM 30m telescope. We observe a complex velocity field and velocity dispersion in the DR21 filament in which regions of highest column-density, i.e. dense cores, have a lower velocity dispersion than the…
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