A Massive Protostar Forming by Ordered Collapse of a Dense, Massive Core
Yichen Zhang, Jonathan C. Tan, James M. De Buizer, Goran Sandell,, Maria T. Beltran, Ed Churchwell, Christopher F. McKee, Ralph Shuping, Jan E., Staff, Charles Telesco, Barbara Whitney

TL;DR
This study uses infrared imaging and radiative transfer modeling to demonstrate that a massive protostar forms through ordered, symmetric collapse of a dense core, supporting a unified star formation model for low and high mass stars.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence and modeling for a symmetric collapse process in massive star formation, extending the unified star formation theory.
Findings
Protostar's true luminosity is significantly higher than isotropic estimates.
Radiative transfer models fit observed spectral energy distribution and intensity profiles.
Supports ordered collapse and bipolar outflows as key processes in massive star formation.
Abstract
We present 30 and 40 micron imaging of the massive protostar G35.20-0.74 with SOFIA-FORCAST. The high surface density of the natal core around the protostar leads to high extinction, even at these relatively long wavelengths, causing the observed flux to be dominated by that emerging from the near-facing outflow cavity. However, emission from the far-facing cavity is still clearly detected. We combine these results with fluxes from the near-infrared to mm to construct a spectral energy distribution (SED). For isotropic emission the bolometric luminosity would be 3.3x10^4 Lsun. We perform radiative transfer modeling of a protostar forming by ordered, symmetric collapse from a massive core bounded by a clump with high mass surface density, Sigma_cl. To fit the SED requires protostellar masses ~20-34 Msun depending on the outflow cavity opening angle (35 - 50 degrees), and Sigma_cl ~ 0.4-1…
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