Physical properties of dense cores in Orion B9
Oskari Miettinen, Jorma Harju, Lauri K. Haikala, and Mika Juvela

TL;DR
This study investigates the physical and chemical properties of dense cores in Orion B9, revealing their temperature, velocity dispersion, chemical abundances, and possible formation mechanisms, and comparing them to other star-forming regions.
Contribution
It provides detailed observational data on dense cores in Orion B9, including temperature, velocity, mass, and chemical composition, and discusses their formation and evolution in the context of star formation theories.
Findings
Core temperatures range from ~9.4-13.9 K.
Most cores have subsonic non-thermal velocity dispersion.
Core properties are similar to those in low-mass star-forming regions.
Abstract
We aim to determine the physical and chemical properties of dense cores in Orion B9. We observed the NH3(1,1) and (2,2), and the N2H+(3-2) lines towards the submm peak positions. These data are used in conjunction with our LABOCA 870 micron dust continuum data. The gas kinetic temperature in the cores is between ~9.4-13.9 K. The non-thermal velocity dispersion is subsonic in most of the cores. The non-thermal linewidth in protostellar cores appears to increase with increasing bolometric luminosity. The core masses are very likely drawn from the same parent distribution as the core masses in Orion B North. Starless cores in the region are likely to be gravitationally bound, and thus prestellar. Some of the cores have a lower radial velocity than the systemic velocity of the region, suggesting that they are members of the "low-velocity part" of Orion B. The observed core-separation…
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