CARMA Large Area Star Formation Survey: Structure and Kinematics of Dense Gas in Serpens Main
Katherine I. Lee, Manuel Fernandez-Lopez, Shaye Storm, Leslie W., Looney, Lee G. Mundy, Dominique Segura-Cox, Peter Teuben, Erik Rosolowsky,, Hector G. Arce, Eve C. Ostriker, Yancy L. Shirley, Woojin Kwon, Jens, Kauffmann, John J. Tobin, Adele L. Plunkett, Marc W. Pound

TL;DR
This study maps and analyzes the structure and kinematics of dense gas in the Serpens Main star-forming region, revealing filament properties, hierarchical structures, and their relation to star formation activity.
Contribution
It provides detailed observations of dense gas structures and kinematics in Serpens Main, identifying filament types and their connection to star formation, which advances understanding of molecular cloud complexity.
Findings
Filaments have lengths of 0.2 pc and widths of 0.03 pc.
Two filament types differ in velocity gradients and mass ratios.
Star formation occurs along supercritical filaments.
Abstract
We present observations of N2H+(1-0), HCO+(1-0), and HCN(1-0) toward the Serpens Main molecular cloud from the CARMA Large Area Star Formation Survey (CLASSy). We mapped 150 square arcminutes of Serpens Main with an angular resolution of 7 arcsecs. The gas emission is concentrated in two subclusters (the NW and SE subclusters). The SE subcluster has more prominent filamentary structures and more complicated kinematics compared to the NW subcluster. The majority of gas in the two subclusters has subsonic to sonic velocity dispersions. We applied a dendrogram technique with N2H+(1-0) to study the gas structures; the SE subcluster has a higher degree of hierarchy than the NW subcluster. Combining the dendrogram and line fitting analyses reveals two distinct relations: a flat relation between nonthermal velocity dispersion and size, and a positive correlation between variation in velocity…
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