Rotating toroids in G10.62-0.38, G19.61-0.23, and G29.96-0.02
M.T. Beltran (1), R. Cesaroni (1), R. Neri (2), and C. Codella (1), ((1) INAF-Osservatorio Astrofisico di Arcetri (2) IRAM)

TL;DR
This study investigates rotating toroids in three massive hot molecular cores using high-resolution observations, revealing velocity gradients indicative of rotation and potential accretion processes onto embedded clusters.
Contribution
It provides detailed kinematic and structural analysis of three hot molecular cores, identifying rotating toroids and inferring ongoing accretion and collapse processes.
Findings
Velocity gradients perpendicular to outflows indicate rotation.
Toroids have masses up to 415 solar masses and diameters up to 12,600 AU.
Infall rates are estimated at 0.01 solar masses per year.
Abstract
Context. In recent years, we have detected clear evidence of rotation in more than 5 hot molecular cores (HMCs). Their identification is confirmed by the fact that the rotation axes are parallel to the axes of the associated bipolar outflows. We have now pursued our investigation by extending the sample to 3 known massive cores, G10.62-0.38, G19.61-0.23, and G29.96-0.02. Aims. We wish to make a thorough study of the structure and kinematics of HMCs and corresponding molecular outflows to reveal possible velocity gradients indicative of rotation of the cores. Methods. We carried out PdBI observations at 2.7 and 1.4~mm of gas and dust with angular resolutions of 2"-3", and 1"-2", respectively. To trace both rotation and expansion, we simultaneously observed CH3CN, a typical HMC tracer, and 13CO, a typical outflow tracer. Results. The CH3CN(12-11) observations have revealed the existence…
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