A Hi-GAL study of the high-mass star-forming region G29.96-0.02
M.T. Beltran (1), L. Olmi (1, 2), R. Cesaroni (1), E. Schisano (3), D., Elia (3), S. Molinari (3), A.M. Di Giorgio (3), J.M. Kirk (4), J.C. Mottram, (5), M. Pestalozzi (3), L. Testi (1, 6), M.A. Thompson (7) ((1)

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel far-infrared data to analyze the physical properties, evolutionary stages, and star formation activity in the high-mass star-forming region G29.96-0.02, revealing insights into source stability and star formation efficiency.
Contribution
First comprehensive far-infrared analysis of G29.96-0.02, identifying source properties, evolutionary stages, and star formation characteristics using Hi-GAL data.
Findings
198 sources detected across all five Herschel bands.
24 microns-dark sources are in earlier evolutionary stages.
Most sources are stable against gravitational collapse.
Abstract
Context. G29.96-0.02 is a high-mass star-forming cloud observed at 70, 160, 250, 350, and 500 microns as part of the Herschel survey of the Galactic Plane during the Science Demonstration Phase. Aims. We wish to conduct a far-infrared study of the sources associated with this star-forming region by estimating their physical properties and evolutionary stage, and investigating the clump mass function, the star formation efficiency and rate in the cloud. Methods. We have identified the Hi-GAL sources associated with the cloud, searched for possible counterparts at centimeter and infrared wavelengths, fitted their spectral energy distribution and estimated their physical parameters. Results. A total of 198 sources have been detected in all 5 Hi-GAL bands, 117 of which are associated with 24 microns emission and 87 of which are not associated with 24 microns emission. We called the former…
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