The rate and latency of star formation in dense, massive clumps in the Milky Way
M.Heyer, R. Gutermuth, J.S. Urquhart, T. Csengeri, M. Wienen, S., Leurini, K. Menten, F. Wyrowski

TL;DR
This study investigates the rate, latency, and environmental dependence of star formation in dense, massive molecular cloud clumps across the Milky Way, revealing local regulation mechanisms and a low overall fraction of actively star-forming clumps.
Contribution
It provides observational constraints on star formation rates and latency in dense Galactic clumps, linking these to physical properties and environmental factors, and compares star formation activity in different Galactic regions.
Findings
Star formation rate surface density correlates with local cloud properties.
Approximately 23-31% of dense clumps are actively forming stars.
Most dense clumps initially form low-mass stars or none at all.
Abstract
Newborn stars form within the localized, high density regions of molecular clouds. The sequence and rate at which stars form in dense clumps and the dependence on local and global environments are key factors in developing descriptions of stellar production in galaxies. We seek to observationally constrain the rate and latency of star formation in dense massive clumps that are distributed throughout the Galaxy and to compare these results to proposed prescriptions for stellar production. A sample of 24 micron-based Class~I protostars are linked to dust clumps that are embedded within molecular clouds selected from the APEX Telescope Large Area Survey of the Galaxy. We determine the fraction of star-forming clumps, f*, that imposes a constraint on the latency of star formation in units of a clump's lifetime. Protostellar masses are estimated from models of circumstellar environments of…
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