Infall Signatures in a Prestellar Core embedded in the High-Mass 70 $\mu$m Dark IRDC G331.372-00.116
Yanett Contreras, Patricio Sanhueza, James M. Jackson, Andres E., Guzman, Steven Longmore, Guido Garay, Qizhou Zhang, Quang Nguyen-Luong,, Ken'ichi Tatematsu, Fumitaka Nakamura, Takeshi Sakai, Satoshi Ohashi, Tie, Liu, Masao Saito, Laura Gomez, Jill Rathborne, and Scott Whitaker

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA observations to identify infall signatures in a massive prestellar core within a high-mass star-forming IRDC, revealing rapid collapse and properties that challenge existing star formation models.
Contribution
First detection of infall in a massive prestellar core in a high-mass star-forming region, providing new insights into early high-mass star formation processes.
Findings
ALMA1 shows infall signatures with a speed of 1.54 km/s.
ALMA1 is rapidly collapsing, out of virial equilibrium.
Core mass exceeds Jeans mass, challenging current models.
Abstract
Using Galactic Plane surveys, we have selected a massive (1200 M), cold (14 K) 3.6-70 m dark IRDC G331.372-00.116. This IRDC has the potential to form high-mass stars and, given the absence of current star formation signatures, it seems to represent the earliest stages of high-mass star formation. We have mapped the whole IRDC with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) at 1.1 and 1.3 mm in dust continuum and line emission. The dust continuum reveals 22 cores distributed across the IRDC. In this work, we analyze the physical properties of the most massive core, ALMA1, which has no molecular outflows detected in the CO (2-1), SiO (5-4), and HCO (3-2) lines. This core is relatively massive ( = 17.6 M), subvirialized (virial parameter ), and is barely affected by turbulence (transonic Mach number of 1.2). Using the…
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