Fragmentation and dynamical collapse of the starless high-mass star-forming region IRDC18310-4
H. Beuther, H. Linz, J. Tackenberg, Th. Henning, O. Krause, S. Ragan,, M. Nielbock, R. Launhardt, S. Bihr, A. Schmiedeke, R. Smith, T. Sakai

TL;DR
This study investigates the early fragmentation and collapse of a massive starless gas clump, revealing high densities, multiple velocity components, and signs of gravitational instability prior to star formation.
Contribution
It provides detailed observational evidence of fragmentation and dynamical collapse in a high-mass starless region, highlighting similarities with lower-mass cores but with significantly higher densities.
Findings
Fragmentation occurs at ~18000AU scales into four cores.
High-mass regions have much higher densities than low-mass counterparts.
Multiple velocity components indicate dynamic collapse and clumpy structure.
Abstract
Aims: We study the fragmentation and dynamical properties of a massive starless gas clump at the onset of high-mass star formation. Methods: Based on Herschel continuum data we identify a massive gas clump that remains far-infrared dark up to 100mum wavelengths. The fragmentation and dynamical properties are investigated by means of Plateau de Bure Interferometer and Nobeyama 45m single-dish spectral line and continuum observations. Results: The massive gas reservoir fragments at spatial scales of ~18000AU in four cores. Comparing the spatial extent of this high-mass region with intermediate- to low-mass starless cores from the literature, we find that linear sizes do not vary significantly over the whole mass regime. However, the high-mass regions squeeze much more gas into these similar volumes and hence have orders of magnitude larger densities. The fragmentation properties of the…
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