Dense Molecular Cores Being Externally Heated
Gwanjeong Kim, Chang Won Lee, Maheswar Gopinathan, Woong-Seob Jeong,, and Mi-Ryang Kim

TL;DR
This study investigates eight dense cores, revealing external heating effects, the presence of faint protostars in two cores, and suggesting external feedback influences their evolution.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence that external heating from nearby stars impacts the physical and dynamical state of dense molecular cores.
Findings
Two cores harbor faint protostars with luminosity 0.3-4.4 L_sun.
Six cores remain starless and are likely externally heated.
Temperature maps show 3-6 K enhancement at core boundaries.
Abstract
We present results of our study on eight dense cores, previously classified as starless, using infrared (3-160 {\micron}) imaging observations with \textit{AKARI} telescope and molecular line (HCN and NH) mapping observations with \textit{KVN} telescope. Combining our results with the archival IR to mm continuum data, we examined the starless nature of these eight cores. Two of the eight cores are found to harbor faint protostars having luminosity of L. The other six cores are found to remain as starless and probably are in a dynamically transitional state. The temperature maps produced using multi-wavelength images show an enhancement of about 3-6 K towards the outer boundary of these cores, suggesting that they are most likely being heated externally by nearby stars and/or interstellar radiation fields. Large virial parameters and an over-dominance of…
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