A spectral line survey of the starless and proto-stellar cores detected by BLAST toward the Vela-D molecular cloud
Jorge L. Morales Ortiz, Luca Olmi, Michael Burton, Massimo De Luca,, Davide Elia, Teresa Giannini, Dario Lorenzetti, Fabrizio Massi, Francesco, Strafella

TL;DR
This study conducts a spectral line survey of 40 cold dust cores in the Vela-D molecular cloud, revealing physical and chemical variations, systematic motions, and insights into core evolution from starless to proto-stellar stages.
Contribution
It provides new observational data on dense gas tracers in starless and proto-stellar cores, highlighting differences in morphology, dynamics, and chemical profiles related to evolutionary phases.
Findings
Detection of systematic motions in cores
Line wings observed in proto-stellar cores
Mass estimates suggest rapid transition from pre- to proto-stellar phase
Abstract
We present a 3-mm and 1.3-cm spectral line survey conducted with the Mopra 22-m and Parkes 64-m radio telescopes of a sample of 40 cold dust cores, previously observed with BLAST, including both starless and proto-stellar sources. 20 objects were also mapped using molecular tracers of dense gas. To trace the dense gas we used the molecular species NH3, N2H+, HNC, HCO+, H13CO+, HCN and H13CN, where some of them trace the more quiescent gas, while others are sensitive to more dynamical processes. The selected cores have a wide variety of morphological types and also show physical and chemical variations, which may be associated to different evolutionary phases. We find evidence of systematic motions in both starless and proto-stellar cores and we detect line wings in many of the proto-stellar cores. Our observations probe linear distances in the sources >~0.1pc, and are thus sensitive…
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