Properties of massive star-forming clumps with infall motions
Yu-Xin He, Jian-Jun Zhou, Jarken Esimbek, Wei-Guang Ji, Gang Wu,, Xin-Di Tang, Toktarkhan Komesh, Ye Yuan, Da-Lei Li, W.A. Baan

TL;DR
This study characterizes high-mass star-forming clumps with infall motions, analyzing their properties, infall rates, and evolutionary trends across different stages, revealing ongoing material accumulation and mass function similarities with stellar initial mass functions.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of infall motions in high-mass star-forming clumps, including a large sample and detailed characterization across evolutionary stages, which was not previously done at this scale.
Findings
Infall candidates have higher density than non-infall clumps.
Infall rates remain significant across all evolutionary stages.
Clump mass function slopes align with stellar initial mass function.
Abstract
In this work, we aim to characterise high-mass clumps with infall motions. We selected 327 clumps from the Millimetre Astronomy Legacy Team 90-GHz (MALT90) survey, and identified 100 infall candidates. Combined with the results of He et al. (2015), we obtained a sample of 732 high-mass clumps, including 231 massive infall candidates and 501 clumps where infall is not detected. Objects in our sample were classified as pre-stellar, proto-stellar, HII or photo-dissociation region (PDR). The detection rates of the infall candidates in the pre-stellar, proto-stellar, HII and PDR stages are 41.2%, 36.6%, 30.6% and 12.7%, respectively. The infall candidates have a higher H column density and volume density compared with the clumps where infall is not detected at every stage. For the infall candidates, the median values of the infall rates at the pre-stellar, proto-stellar, HII and PDR…
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