On the kinematics of massive star forming regions: the case of IRAS 17233-3606
S. Leurini (1), C. Codella (2), L. Zapata (1,3), M. T. Beltran (2), P., Schilke (4), R. Cesaroni (2) ((1) Max-Planck-Institut fuer, Radioastronomie, (2) INAF, Osservatorio Astrofisico di Arcetri, (3) Centro de, Radioastronomia y Astrofisica, UNAM Mexico

TL;DR
This study investigates the gas kinematics around high-mass star forming region IRAS 17233-3606 using molecular line observations, revealing velocity gradients and outflow interactions that challenge traditional rotation tracers.
Contribution
It provides the first detection of HNCO in massive YSO outflows and highlights the complexity of interpreting molecular velocity gradients in star forming regions.
Findings
Linear velocity gradients observed in multiple molecules.
First detection of HNCO in massive YSO outflows.
CH3CN velocity gradient may be influenced by outflows, not rotation.
Abstract
Direct observations of accretion disks around high-mass young stellar objects would help to discriminate between different models of formation of massive stars. However, given the complexity of massive star forming regions, such studies are still limited in number. Additionally, there is still no general consensus on the molecular tracers to be used for such investigations. Because of its close distance and high luminosity, IRAS 17233-3606 is a potential good laboratory to search for traces of rotation in the inner gas around the protostar(s). Therefore, we selected the source for a detailed analysis of its molecular emission at 230 GHz with the SMA. We systematically investigated the velocity fields of transitions in the SMA spectra which are not affected by overlap with other transitions, and searched for coherent velocity gradients to compare them to the distribution of outflows in…
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