The onset of high-mass star formation in the direct vicinity of the galactic mini-starburst W43
H. Beuther, J. Tackenberg, H. Linz, Th. Henning, O. Krause, S. Ragan,, M. Nielbock, R. Launhardt, A. Schmiedeke, F. Schuller, P. Carlhoff, Q., Nguyen-Luong, T. Sakai

TL;DR
This study investigates the earliest stages of high-mass star formation near the active W43 mini-starburst, revealing the existence of starless gas clumps and the influence of environmental radiation on their properties.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed multi-wavelength analysis of high-mass starless gas clumps in a mini-starburst environment, highlighting environmental effects on star formation.
Findings
Identification of infrared dark, high-mass starless gas clumps.
Detection of temperature gradients influenced by nearby starburst activity.
Evidence of interacting gas components at different velocities.
Abstract
Context: The earliest stages of high-mass star formation are still poorly characterized. It is also unknown whether the initial conditions vary with environment. Aims: We want to investigate the youngest massive gas clumps in the environment of extremely active star formation. Methods: We selected the IRDC18454 complex associated with the W43 Galactic mini-starburst, and observed it in the continuum emission between 70mu and 1.2mm, and in spectral line emission of N2H+ and 13CO with single-dish instruments and an interferometer. Results: The multi-wavelength continuum study allows us to identify clumps that are infrared dark even at 70mu and hence the best candidates to be genuine high-mass starless gas clumps. The spectral energy distributions reveal elevated temperatures and luminosities compared to more quiescent environments. Furthermore, we identify a temperature gradient from the…
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