Hierarchical fragmentation and collapse signatures in a high-mass starless region
H. Beuther, Th. Henning, H. Linz, S. Feng, S.E. Ragan, R.J. Smith, S., Bihr, T. Sakai, R. Kuiper

TL;DR
This study investigates the hierarchical fragmentation and collapse signatures in a high-mass starless gas region, revealing complex sub-structures, core masses exceeding thermal predictions, and evidence of global collapse with low internal turbulence.
Contribution
It provides high-resolution observations of a massive starless region, demonstrating hierarchical fragmentation and suggesting models involving turbulence and magnetic fields.
Findings
Sub-structures fragment hierarchically on smaller scales.
Core masses are much larger than thermal Jeans mass predictions.
Spectral data indicate global collapse with low internal turbulence.
Abstract
Aims: Understanding the fragmentation and collapse properties of the dense gas during the onset of high-mass star formation. Methods: We observed the massive (~800M_sun) starless gas clump IRDC18310-4 with the Plateau de Bure Interferometer (PdBI) at sub-arcsecond resolution in the 1.07mm continuum andN2H+(3-2) line emission. Results: Zooming from a single-dish low-resolution map to previous 3mm PdBI data, and now the new 1.07mm continuum observations, the sub-structures hierarchically fragment on the increasingly smaller spatial scales. While the fragment separations may still be roughly consistent with pure thermal Jeans fragmentation, the derived core masses are almost two orders of magnitude larger than the typical Jeans mass at the given densities and temperatures. However, the data can be reconciled with models using non-homogeneous initial density structures, turbulence and/or…
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