Initial phases of massive star formation in high infrared extinction clouds. I. Physical parameters
K.L.J. Rygl, F. Wyrowski, F. Schuller, and K.M. Menten, (Max-Planck-Institut fuer Radioastronomie)

TL;DR
This study introduces an infrared extinction mapping method to identify high-density regions in the Galactic plane, revealing previously missed cold clouds and exploring their physical properties to understand early massive star formation stages.
Contribution
It presents a new infrared extinction-based approach to detect dense star-forming clouds, expanding the known sample and analyzing their physical conditions and evolutionary stages.
Findings
High extinction clouds contain extended cold dust emission.
Many clouds show signs of early star formation activity.
An evolutionary sequence from dark clouds to active star-forming regions.
Abstract
The earliest phases of massive star formation are found in cold and dense infrared dark clouds (IRDCs). Since the detection method of IRDCs is very sensitive to the local properties of the background emission, we present here an alternative method to search for high column density in the Galactic plane by using infrared extinction maps. We find clouds between 1 and 5 kpc, of which many were missed by previous surveys. By studying the physical conditions of a subsample of these clouds, we aim at a better understanding of the initial conditions of massive star formation. We made extinction maps of the Galactic plane based on the 3.6-4.5 microns color excess between the two shortest wavelength Spitzer IRAC bands, reaching to visual extinctions of ~100 mag and column densities of 9x10^22 cm^-2. From this we compiled a new sample of cold and compact high extinction clouds. We used the MAMBO…
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