A census of dense cores in the Taurus L1495 cloud from the Herschel Gould Belt Survey
K. A. Marsh, J. M. Kirk, Ph. Andre, M. J. Griffin, V. Konyves, P., Palmeirim, A. Men'shchikov, D. Ward-Thompson, M. Benedettini, D. W., Bresnahan, J. Di Francesco, D. Elia, F. Motte, N. Peretto, S. Pezzuto, A., Roy, S. Sadavoy, N. Schneider, L. Spinoglio, and G. J. White

TL;DR
This study catalogs dense cores in the Taurus L1495 cloud using Herschel data, analyzing their properties, mass functions, and spatial distribution to understand star formation processes.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive Herschel-based census of dense cores, including their mass distribution and relation to filamentary structures, highlighting differences between prestellar and unbound cores.
Findings
Prestellar core mass function is lognormal, similar to stellar initial mass function.
All prestellar cores are located on filaments exceeding collapse density thresholds.
Unbound starless core mass function follows a power-law, not lognormal.
Abstract
We present a catalogue of dense cores in a field of the Taurus star-forming region, inclusive of the L1495 cloud, derived from Herschel SPIRE and PACS observations in the 70 m, 160 m, 250 m, 350 m, and 500 m continuum bands. Estimates of mean dust temperature and total mass are derived using modified blackbody fits to the spectral energy distributions. We detect 525 starless cores of which -20% are gravitationally bound and therefore presumably prestellar. Our census of unbound objects is % complete for in low density regions ( mag), while the bound (prestellar) subset is % complete for overall. The prestellar core mass function (CMF) is consistent with lognormal form, resembling the stellar system initial mass function, as has been reported…
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