From high-mass starless cores to high-mass protostellar objects
H. Beuther, Th. Henning, H. Linz, O. Krause, M. NIelbock, J., Steinacker

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel far-infrared observations to detail the evolutionary sequence of high-mass star formation, from starless cores to protostellar objects, revealing temperature and luminosity changes across stages.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed spectral and physical characterization of high-mass star-forming regions at different evolutionary stages using Herschel data.
Findings
Young regions are fitted by single black-body components at ~17K.
More evolved regions show mid-infrared excess from warmer components.
Infrared-dark sources have low bolometric to submm luminosity ratios.
Abstract
Aims: Our aim is to understand the evolutionary sequence of high-mass star formation from the earliest evolutionary stage of high-mass starless cores, via high-mass cores with embedded low- to intermediate-mass objects, to finally high-mass protostellar objects. Methods: Herschel far-infrared PACS and SPIRE observations are combined with existing data at longer and shorter wavelengths to characterize the spectral and physical evolution of massive star-forming regions. Results: The new Herschel images spectacularly show the evolution of the youngest and cold high-mass star-forming regions from mid-infrared shadows on the Wien-side of the spectral energy distribution (SED), via structures almost lost in the background emission around 100mum, to strong emission sources at the Rayleigh-Jeans tail. Fits of the SEDs for four exemplary regions covering evolutionary stages from high-mass…
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