A census of dense cores in the Aquila cloud complex: SPIRE/PACS observations from the Herschel Gould Belt survey
V. Konyves, Ph. Andre, A. Men'shchikov, P. Palmeirim, D. Arzoumanian,, N. Schneider, A. Roy, P. Didelon, A. Maury, Y. Shimajiri, J. Di Francesco, S., Bontemps, N. Peretto, M. Benedettini, J.-Ph. Bernard, D. Elia, M. J. Griffin,, T. Hill, J. Kirk, B. Ladjelate, K. Marsh

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel observations to catalog dense cores in the Aquila cloud, revealing their properties, spatial distribution, and link to filamentary structures, supporting theories on star formation and core evolution.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive census of dense cores in Aquila, analyzing their mass function, spatial correlation with filaments, and implications for star formation efficiency.
Findings
Prestellar cores have a mass function similar to the stellar initial mass function.
Approximately 60% of starless cores are gravitationally bound prestellar cores.
Prestellar cores are predominantly located within dense, supercritical filaments.
Abstract
We present and discuss the results of the Herschel Gould Belt survey observations in a ~11 deg^2 area of the Aquila molecular cloud complex at d~260 pc, imaged with the SPIRE/PACS cameras from 70 to 500 micron. We identify a complete sample of starless dense cores and embedded protostars in this region, and analyze their global properties and spatial distributions. We find a total of 651 starless cores, ~60% of which are gravitationally bound prestellar cores, and they will likely form stars in the future. We also detect 58 protostellar cores. The core mass function (CMF) derived for the prestellar cores is very similar in shape to the stellar initial mass function (IMF), supporting the earlier view that there is a close physical link between the IMF and the CMF. The global shift in mass scale observed between the CMF and the IMF is consistent with a typical star formation efficiency of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
