Filament Fragmentation in High-Mass Star Formation
H. Beuther, S.E. Ragan, K. Johnston, Th. Henning, A. Hacar, J.T., Kainulainen

TL;DR
This study investigates the formation and fragmentation of high-mass star-forming filaments at small scales (~0.1pc), revealing core spacing, velocity structures, and the influence of turbulence and magnetic support.
Contribution
It provides high-resolution observations of a high-mass star-forming filament, analyzing its fragmentation scale, velocity gradients, and the role of turbulence and magnetic fields in its stability.
Findings
Cores are spaced approximately 0.40pc apart, consistent with cylinder fragmentation.
A high mass-to-length ratio suggests additional support mechanisms against collapse.
Velocity gradients indicate possible sub-filament structures and kinematic coupling with the surrounding cloud.
Abstract
Aims: We resolve the length-scales for filament formation and fragmentation (res. <=0.1pc), in particular the Jeans length and cylinder fragmentation scale. Methods: We observed the prototypical high-mass star-forming filament IRDC18223 with the Plateau de Bure Interferometer (PdBI) in the 3.2mm continuum and N2H+(1-0) line emission in a ten field mosaic at a spatial resolution of ~4'' (~14000AU). Results: The dust continuum emission resolves the filament into a chain of at least 12 relatively regularly spaced cores. The mean separation between cores is ~0.40(+-0.18)pc. While this is approximately consistent with the fragmentation of an infinite, isothermal, gravitationally bound gas cylinder, a high mass-to-length ratio of M/l~1000M_sun/pc requires additional turbulent and/or magnetic support against radial collapse of the filament. The N2H+(1-0) data reveal a velocity gradient…
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