Herschel Observations of the W3 GMC (II): Clues to the Formation of Clusters of High-Mass Stars
A. Rivera-Ingraham, P. G. Martin, D. Polychroni, N. Schneider, F., Motte, S. Bontemps, M. Hennemann, A. Men'shchikov, Q. Nguyen Luong, A., Zavagno, Ph. Andre, J.-Ph. Bernard, J. Di Francesco, C. Fallscheer, T. Hill,, V. Konyves, A. Marston, S. Pezzuto,.K. L. J. Rygl

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel data to analyze the W3 GMC, revealing how feedback and dynamic processes influence high-mass star and cluster formation through dust density structures.
Contribution
It identifies key density distribution features and their shifts due to feedback, supporting the convergent constructive feedback model for high-mass star formation.
Findings
PDF breaks shift to higher Av with stellar feedback
High-density regions show potential for high-mass star formation
Feedback influences local evolution and star formation efficiency
Abstract
The W3 GMC is a prime target for investigating the formation of high-mass stars and clusters. This second study of W3 within the HOBYS Key Program provides a comparative analysis of subfields within W3 to further constrain the processes leading to the observed structures and stellar population. Probability density functions (PDFs) and cumulative mass distributions (CMDs) were created from dust column density maps, quantified as extinction Av. The shape of the PDF, typically represented with a lognormal function at low Av "breaking" to a power-law tail at high Av, is influenced by various processes including turbulence and self-gravity. The breaks can also be identified, often more readily, in the CMDs. The PDF break from lognormal (Av(SF)= 6-10 mag) appears to shift to higher Av by stellar feedback, so that high-mass star-forming regions tend to have higher PDF breaks. A second break at…
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