The standard model of low-mass star formation applied to massive stars: a multi-wavelength picture of AFGL 2591
K. G. Johnston, D. S. Shepherd, T. P. Robitaille, K. Wood

TL;DR
This study investigates whether the massive star AFGL 2591 forms through a scaled-up low-mass star formation process, using multi-wavelength observations and modeling to reveal similar features like jets and accretion structures.
Contribution
It provides detailed multi-wavelength observations and modeling that support the idea that massive star formation can resemble low-mass star formation processes.
Findings
Detection of a collimated jet extending 4000AU from the star
Identification of a compact core with dust emission at 7mm
Evidence of a cluster of young stars within the envelope
Abstract
This paper aims to investigate the hypothesis that the embedded luminous star AFGL2591-VLA3 (2.3E5Lsun at 3.33kpc) is forming according to a scaled-up version of a low-mass star formation scenario. We present multi-configuration VLA 3.6cm and 7mm, as well as CARMA C18O and 3mm continuum observations to investigate the morphology and kinematics of the ionized gas, dust, and molecular gas around AFGL2591. We also compare our results to ancillary near-IR images, and model the SED and 2MASS image profiles of AFGL2591 using a dust continuum radiative transfer code. The observed 3.6cm images uncover for the first time that the central powering source AFGL2591-VLA3 has a compact core plus collimated jet morphology, extending 4000AU eastward from the central source with an opening angle of <10deg at this radius. However, at 7mm VLA3 does not show a jet morphology, but instead compact (<500AU)…
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