Dissecting a hot molecular core: The case of G31.41+0.31
R. Cesaroni (1), M.T. Beltr\'an (1), Q. Zhang (2), H. Beuther (3), C., Fallscheer (3, 4) ((1) INAf-Osservatorio Astrofisico di Arcetri, (2), Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, (3) Max-Planck-Institut f\"ur, Astronomie Heidelberg, (4) Department of Physics, Astronomy

TL;DR
This study provides high-resolution observations of the hot molecular core G31.41+0.31, revealing a velocity gradient likely due to rotation, and discusses the core's structure and kinematics to understand massive star formation.
Contribution
It offers improved observational data and analysis to distinguish between rotation and expansion in the core, favoring rotation as the primary cause of the velocity gradient.
Findings
Velocity gradient confirmed across the core.
Bipolar outflow less likely due to dynamical constraints.
Rotating toroid is the most plausible explanation.
Abstract
We made a detailed observational analysis of a well known hot molecular core lying in the high-mass star-forming region G31.41+0.31. This core is believed to contain deeply embedded massive stars and presents a velocity gradient that has been interpreted either as rotation or as expansion, depending on the authors. Our aim was to shed light on this question and possibly prepare the ground for higher resolution ALMA observations which could directly detect circumstellar disks around the embedded massive stars. Observations at sub-arcsecond resolution were performed with the Submillimeter Array in methyl cyanide, a typical hot molecular core tracer, and 12CO and 13CO, well known outflow tracers. We also obtained sensitive continuum maps at 1.3 mm. Our findings confirm the existence of a sharp velocity gradient across the core, but cannot confirm the existence of a bipolar outflow…
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