Kinematic and Thermal Structure at the onset of high-mass star formation
S. Bihr, H. Beuther, H. Linz, S. E. Ragan, M. Hennemann, J., Tackenberg, R. J. Smith, O. Krause, and Th. Henning

TL;DR
This study investigates the kinematic and thermal properties of young high-mass star-forming gas clumps using ammonia observations, revealing low turbulence, velocity gradients, and temperature distributions that inform early star formation processes.
Contribution
It provides high-resolution ammonia measurements of multiple young star-forming regions, highlighting velocity structures and temperature characteristics at the earliest stages of high-mass star formation.
Findings
Cold gas temperatures between 10-30 K
Presence of velocity gradients in most regions
Steep velocity gradients indicating cloud collapse
Abstract
We want to understand the kinematic and thermal properties of young massive gas clumps prior to and at the earliest evolutionary stages of high-mass star formation. Do we find signatures of gravitational collapse? Do we find temperature gradients in the vicinity or absence of infrared emission sources? Do we find coherent velocity structures toward the center of the dense and cold gas clumps? To determine kinematics and gas temperatures, we used ammonia, because it is known to be a good tracer and thermometer of dense gas. We observed the NH(1,1) and (2,2) lines within seven very young high-mass star-forming regions with the VLA and the Effelsberg 100m telescope. This allows us to study velocity structures, linewidths, and gas temperatures at high spatial resolution of 3-5, corresponding to 0.05 pc. We find on average cold gas clumps with temperatures in the range between…
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