Global collapse of molecular clouds as a formation mechanism for the most massive stars
N. Peretto, G. A. Fuller, A. Duarte-Cabral, A. Avison, P. Hennebelle,, J. E. Pineda, Ph. Andre, S. Bontemps, F. Motte, N. Schneider, S. Molinari

TL;DR
This study presents evidence that the global collapse of a massive molecular cloud, SDC335, leads to the formation of the most massive stars through large-scale accretion, challenging the idea that fragmentation alone dominates massive star formation.
Contribution
It provides detailed observational data showing that large-scale infall and collapse significantly contribute to massive star formation, highlighting the role of global collapse over fragmentation.
Findings
SDC335 exhibits a network of dense filaments converging at star-forming cores.
The cloud shows signs of global collapse with an infall velocity of 0.7 km/s.
The infall rate is sufficient to form an early O-type star within the cloud's lifetime.
Abstract
The relative importance of primordial molecular cloud fragmentation versus large-scale accretion still remains to be assessed in the context of massive core/star formation. Studying the kinematics of the dense gas surrounding massive-star progenitors can tell us the extent to which large-scale flow of material impacts the growth in mass of star-forming cores. Here we present a comprehensive dataset of the 5500(+/-800) Msun infrared dark cloud SDC335.579-0.272 (hereafter SDC335) which exhibits a network of cold, dense, parsec-long filaments. Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA) Cycle 0 observations reveal two massive star-forming cores, MM1 and MM2, sitting at the centre of SDC335 where the filaments intersect. With a gas mass of 545(+770,-385) Msun contained within a source diameter of 0.05pc, MM1 is one of the most massive, compact protostellar cores ever observed in the Galaxy. As a…
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