The fragmentation properties of massive protocluster gas clumps: an ALMA study
F. Fontani, B. Commer\c{c}on, A. Giannetti, M.T. Beltr\'an, \'A., S\'anchez-Monge, L. Testi, J. Brand, J.C. Tan

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA observations and simulations to analyze how magnetic fields, turbulence, and temperature influence the fragmentation of massive protocluster gas clumps, shedding light on star cluster formation processes.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed ALMA imaging of fragmentation modes in massive star-forming clumps and explores the role of magnetic support through simulations.
Findings
Fragments are observed in 8 of 11 clumps.
Two fragmentation modes are identified: dominant plus smaller fragments, and many similar-sized fragments.
Warmer, more massive clumps tend to have more and larger fragments.
Abstract
Fragmentation of massive dense molecular clouds is the starting point in the formation of rich clusters and massive stars. Theory and numerical simulations indicate that the population of the fragments (number, mass, diameter, separation) resulting from the gravitational collapse of such clumps is probably regulated by the balance between the magnetic field and the other competitors of self-gravity, in particular turbulence and protostellar feedback. We have observed 11 massive, dense and young star-forming clumps with the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA) in the thermal dust continuum emission at ~mm with an angular resolution of 0.25 arcseconds with the aim of determining their population of fragments. We find fragments on sub-arcsecond scales in 8 out of the 11 sources. The ALMA images indicate two different fragmentation modes: a dominant fragment surrounded by…
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