The dynamical state of the First Hydrostatic Core Candidate Cha-MMS1
A. E. Tsitali, A. Belloche, B. Commer\c{c}on, and K. M. Menten

TL;DR
This study investigates the dynamical properties of the First Hydrostatic Core candidate Cha-MMS1, revealing rotation, infall motions, and high-density activity consistent with early star formation stages, supporting its classification as a first core or very young protostar.
Contribution
It provides detailed kinematic analysis of Cha-MMS1 using molecular line observations, aligning observational data with theoretical models of the first core phase.
Findings
Detection of classical infall signatures in molecular lines.
Evidence of rotation with a velocity gradient of 3.1 km/s/pc.
Absence of large-scale outflow, but presence of high-velocity inner material.
Abstract
Observations of First Hydrostatic Core candidates, a theoretically predicted evolutionary link between the prestellar and protostellar phases, are vital for probing the earliest phases of star formation. We aim to determine the dynamical state of the First Hydrostatic Core candidate Cha-MMS1. We observed Cha-MMS1 in various transitions with the APEX and Mopra telescopes. The molecular emission was modeled with a radiative transfer code to derive constraints on the envelope kinematics. We derive an internal luminosity of 0.08 - 0.18 Lsol. An average velocity gradient of 3.1(0.1) km/s/pc over 0.08 pc is found perpendicular to the filament in which Cha-MMS1 is embedded. The gradient is flatter in the outer parts and at the innermost 2000 - 4000 AU. These features suggest solid-body rotation beyond 4000 AU and slower, differential rotation beyond 8000 AU. The origin of the flatter gradient…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
