Kinetic temperature of massive star forming molecular clumps measured with formaldehyde
X. D. Tang, C. Henkel, K. M. Menten, X. W. Zheng, J. Esimbek, J. J., Zhou, C. C. Yeh, C. K\"onig, Y. Yuan, Y. X. He, and D. L. Li

TL;DR
This study measures the kinetic temperature of massive star-forming molecular clumps using formaldehyde spectral lines, comparing results with ammonia and dust data, revealing insights into turbulence and shock effects in star formation regions.
Contribution
It demonstrates that formaldehyde lines can reliably trace gas kinetic temperature and provides a comparative analysis with ammonia and dust measurements in massive star-forming clumps.
Findings
Para-H2CO traces temperatures from 30 to 61 K, averaging 46 K.
Para-H2CO temperatures often match NH3 and dust temperatures, especially in HII regions.
Higher temperatures are associated with outflows and shocks, indicating dynamic processes.
Abstract
For a general understanding of the physics involved in the star formation process, measurements of physical parameters such as temperature and density are indispensable. The chemical and physical properties of dense clumps of molecular clouds are strongly affected by the kinetic temperature. Therefore, this parameter is essential for a better understanding of the interstellar medium. Formaldehyde, a molecule which traces the entire dense molecular gas, appears to be the most reliable tracer to directly measure the gas kinetic temperature.We aim to determine the kinetic temperature with spectral lines from formaldehyde and to compare the results with those obtained from ammonia lines for a large number of massive clumps.Three 218 GHz transitions (JKAKC=303-202, 322-221, and 321-220) of para-H2CO were observed with the 15m James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) toward 30 massive clumps of…
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