The Dynamics of Massive Starless Cores with ALMA
Jonathan C. Tan (1,2), Shuo Kong (1), Michael J. Butler (1), Paola, Caselli (3), Francesco Fontani (4) ((1) Dept. of Astronomy, University of, Florida, (2) Dept. of Physics, University of Florida, (3) School of Physics, and Astronomy, University of Leeds

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA observations to analyze massive starless cores in IRDCs, providing evidence that magnetically regulated core formation influences the initial mass function of stars.
Contribution
It offers observational support for the Turbulent Core model, highlighting the role of magnetic fields in the formation and stability of massive starless cores.
Findings
Massive cores are consistent with virialized, magnetized models.
Moderately enhanced magnetic fields may be necessary for core stability.
Magnetic regulation could inhibit fragmentation, influencing the stellar IMF.
Abstract
How do stars that are more massive than the Sun form, and thus how is the stellar initial mass function (IMF) established? Such intermediate- and high-mass stars may be born from relatively massive pre-stellar gas cores, which are more massive than the thermal Jeans mass. The Turbulent Core Accretion model invokes such cores as being in approximate virial equilibrium and in approximate pressure equilibrium with their surrounding clump medium. Their internal pressure is provided by a combination of turbulence and magnetic fields. Alternatively, the Competitive Accretion model requires strongly sub-virial initial conditions that then lead to extensive fragmentation to the thermal Jeans scale, with intermediate- and high-mass stars later forming by competitive Bondi-Hoyle accretion. To test these models, we have identified four prime examples of massive (~100Msun) clumps from mid-infrared…
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