Extended ammonia observations towards the 'Integral-Shaped Filament'
Gang Wu, Keping Qiu, Jarken Esimbek, Xingwu Zheng, Christian Henkel,, Dalei Li, Xiaohong Han

TL;DR
This study maps the integral-shaped filament in Orion A using NH3 lines, revealing regular clump spacing consistent with gravitational instability theories, and identifies velocity gradients and temperature variations linked to star formation processes.
Contribution
First detailed NH3 mapping of the entire ISF in Orion A, showing clump spacing matches theoretical predictions and analyzing velocity and temperature structures related to star formation.
Findings
Clump spacing matches thermal and turbulent instability predictions.
Velocity gradient suggests overall rotation of the molecular cloud.
Temperature variations correlate with star-forming regions.
Abstract
Recent observations suggest a scenario in which filamentary structures in the ISM represent the first step towards clumps/cores and eventually star formation. The densest filaments would then fragment into prestellar cores owing to gravitational instability. We seek to understand the roles filamentary structures play in high-mass star formation. We mapped the integral-shaped filament (ISF) in NH3 (1, 1) and (2, 2). The whole filamentary structure is uniformly and fully sampled. We find that the morphology revealed by the map of velocity-integrated intensity of the NH3 (1, 1) line is closely associated with the dust ridge. We identify 6 "clumps" related to the well known OMC-1 to 5 and 11 "sub-clumps" within the map and they are separated not randomly but in roughly equal intervals along the ISF. The average spacing of clumps is 11.30'1.31' (1.360.16 pc ) and the average…
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