Gas dynamics in Massive Dense Cores in Cygnus-X
T. Csengeri, S. Bontemps, N. Schneider, F. Motte, S. Dib

TL;DR
This study investigates the kinematic properties of dense gas in Massive Dense Cores in Cygnus-X, revealing complex dynamics and challenging turbulence-supported core models, suggesting small-scale converging flows trigger star formation.
Contribution
It provides high-resolution observations and analysis showing that MDCs are not in equilibrium but are influenced by small-scale flows, offering new insights into star formation processes.
Findings
Line-widths smaller than turbulence model predictions
Detection of organized bulk motions in some cores
Diverse velocity structures linked to fragmentation
Abstract
We study the kinematic properties of dense gas surrounding massive protostars recognized by Bontemps et a. (2010) in a sample of five Massive Dense Cores in Cygnus-X. We investigate whether turbulent support plays a major role in stabilizing the core against fragmentation into Jeans-mass objects or alternatively, the observed kinematics could indicate a high level of dynamics. We present IRAM 30m single-dish (HCO+ and H13CO+) and IRAM PdBI high angular-resolution observations of dense gas tracers (H13CO+ and H13CN) to reveal the kinematics of molecular gas at scales from 0.03 to 0.1 pc. Radiative transfer modeling shows that H13CO+ is depleted within the envelopes of massive protostars and traces the bulk of material surrounding the protostars rather than their inner envelopes. H13CN shows a better correspondence with the peak of the continuum emission, possibly due to abundance…
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