Are Infrared Dark Clouds Really Quiescent?
S. Feng, H. Beuther, Q. Zhang, Th. Henning, H. Linz, S. Ragan, R., Smith

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution observations to analyze the fragmentation, chemistry, and dynamical state of infrared dark clouds, revealing they are not entirely quiescent and are influenced by non-thermal motions and potential protostellar activity.
Contribution
It provides detailed interferometric and line survey data showing that IRDCs have complex fragmentation and chemistry, challenging the idea they are completely quiescent.
Findings
Fragments have masses >10 Msun, exceeding thermal Jeans mass.
Non-thermal motions support fragments against gravity.
Evidence of protostellar activity and infall motions.
Abstract
The dense, cold regions where high-mass stars form are poorly characterised, yet they represent an ideal opportunity to learn more about the initial conditions of high-mass star formation (HMSF), since high-mass starless cores (HMSCs) lack the violent feedback seen at later evolutionary stages. We present continuum maps obtained from the Submillimeter Array (SMA) interferometry at 1.1 mm for four infrared dark clouds (IRDCs, G28.34S, IRDC 18530, IRDC 18306, and IRDC 18308). We also present 1 mm/3 mm line surveys using IRAM 30 m single-dish observations. Our results are: (1) At a spatial resolution of 10^4 AU, the 1.1 mm SMA observations resolve each source into several fragments. The mass of each fragment is on average >10 Msun, which exceeds the predicted thermal Jeans mass of the whole clump by a factor of up to 30, indicating that thermal pressure does not dominate the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
