Detection of a turbulent gas component associated with a starless core with subthermal turbulence in the Orion A cloud
Satoshi Ohashi, Ken'ichi Tatematsu, Patricio Sanhueza, Quang Nguyn, Luong, Tomoya Hirota, Minho Choi, Norikazu Mizuno

TL;DR
This study detects a turbulent gas component with subthermal turbulence in a starless core within Orion A, revealing a transition from turbulent cloud to quiescent core, and providing insights into early star formation conditions.
Contribution
It presents the first detection of a wing component in NH₃ emission indicating turbulence in a starless core, with detailed analysis of its physical properties and relation to the surrounding gas.
Findings
Detection of a turbulent wing component in NH₃ emission.
Turbulent gas has a temperature of 8-13 K and density of ~10⁴ cm⁻³.
Velocity offset suggests a transition from turbulent cloud to quiescent core.
Abstract
We report the detection of a wing component in NH emission toward the starless core TUKH122 with subthermal turbulence in the Orion A cloud. This NH core is suggested to be on the verge of star formation because the turbulence inside the NH core is almost completely dissipated, and also because it is surrounded by CCS, which resembles the prestellar core L1544 in Taurus showing infall motions. Observations were carried out with the Nobeyama 45 m telescope at 0.05 km s velocity resolution. We find that the NH line profile consists of two components. The quiescent main component has a small linewidth of 0.3 km s dominated by thermal motions, and the red-shifted wing component has a large linewidth of 1.36 km s representing turbulent motions. These components show kinetic temperatures of 11 K and 30 K, respectively. Furthermore, there is a clear…
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