Young starless cores embedded in the magnetically dominated Pipe Nebula
Pau Frau (1), Josep Miquel Girart (1), Maria T. Beltran (2), Oscar, Morata (3, 4), Josep Maria Masque (5), Gemma Busquet (5), Felipe O. Alves, (1), Alvaro Sanchez-Monge (5), Robert Estalella (5), Gabriel A. P. Franco, (6) ((1) Institut de Ciencies de l'Espai (CSIC-IEEC)

TL;DR
This study investigates the physical and chemical properties of young, starless cores in the Pipe Nebula, revealing their early evolutionary stage and the influence of magnetic fields on their development.
Contribution
It provides new observational data on the physical and chemical conditions of starless cores in a magnetically dominated environment, linking core evolution to magnetic field properties.
Findings
Cores are in very early evolutionary stages with young chemistry.
All cores show early-time molecular emission, with some showing late-time molecules.
A correlation exists between chemical stage and magnetic properties.
Abstract
The Pipe Nebula is a massive, nearby dark molecular cloud with a low star-formation efficiency which makes it a good laboratory to study the very early stages of the star formation process. The Pipe Nebula is largely filamentary, and appears to be threaded by a uniform magnetic field at scales of few parsecs, perpendicular to its main axis. The field is only locally perturbed in a few regions, such as the only active cluster forming core B59. The aim of this study is to investigate primordial conditions in low-mass pre-stellar cores and how they relate to the local magnetic field in the cloud. We used the IRAM 30-m telescope to carry out a continuum and molecular survey at 3 and 1 mm of early- and late-time molecules toward four selected starless cores inside the Pipe Nebula. We found that the dust continuum emission maps trace better the densest regions than previous 2MASS extinction…
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