CARMA Large Area Star Formation Survey: Project Overview with Analysis of Dense Gas Structure and Kinematics in Barnard 1
S. Storm, L. G. Mundy, M. Fern\'andez-L\'opez, K. I. Lee, L. W., Looney, P. J. Teuben, E. Rosolowsky, H. G. Arce, E. C. Ostriker, D., Segura-Cox, M. W. Pound, D. M. Salter, N. H. Volgenau, Y. L. Shirley, C., Chen, H. Gong, A. L. Plunkett, J. J. Tobin, W. Kwon, A. Isella

TL;DR
This paper presents the CARMA Large Area Star Formation Survey focusing on Barnard 1, revealing dense gas structures, kinematic complexity, and new compact objects, advancing understanding of molecular cloud morphology and star formation processes.
Contribution
It introduces a new dendrogram algorithm for analyzing dense gas structures and provides detailed kinematic and morphological data for Barnard 1.
Findings
N2H+ emission correlates with dust morphology
Identified six compact objects, three new detections
Dense gas structures are likely flattened, not spherical
Abstract
We present details of the CARMA Large Area Star Formation Survey (CLASSy), while focusing on observations of Barnard 1. CLASSy is a CARMA Key Project that spectrally imaged N2H+, HCO+, and HCN (J=1-0 transitions) across over 800 square arcminutes of the Perseus and Serpens Molecular Clouds. The observations have angular resolution near 7" and spectral resolution near 0.16 km/s. We imaged ~150 square arcminutes of Barnard 1, focusing on the main core, and the B1 Ridge and clumps to its southwest. N2H+ shows the strongest emission, with morphology similar to cool dust in the region, while HCO+ and HCN trace several molecular outflows from a collection of protostars in the main core. We identify a range of kinematic complexity, with N2H+ velocity dispersions ranging from ~0.05-0.50 km/s across the field. Simultaneous continuum mapping at 3 mm reveals six compact object detections, three of…
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