Kinematics of dense gas in the L1495 filament
A. Punanova, P. Caselli, J. E. Pineda, A. Pon, M. Tafalla, A. Hacar,, and L. Bizzocchi

TL;DR
This study investigates the kinematics and angular momentum transfer in dense gas cores along the L1495 filament, revealing how internal motions and magnetic fields influence core formation and evolution.
Contribution
It provides detailed measurements of velocity dispersions, gradients, and angular momenta across multiple tracers, highlighting the role of magnetic fields and internal motions at different scales.
Findings
Cores show similar properties along the filament.
Non-thermal velocity dispersion increases in lower density tracers.
Angular momentum decreases towards core centers, indicating magnetic influence.
Abstract
We study the kinematics of the dense gas of starless and protostellar cores traced by the N2D+(2-1), N2H+(1-0), DCO+(2-1), and H13CO+(1-0) transitions along the L1495 filament and the kinematic links between the cores and the surrounding molecular cloud. We measure velocity dispersions, local and total velocity gradients and estimate the specific angular momenta of 13 dense cores in the four transitions using the on-the-fly observations with the IRAM 30 m antenna. To study a possible connection to the filament gas, we use the fit results of the C18O(1-0) survey performed by Hacar et al. (2013). All cores show similar properties along the 10 pc-long filament. N2D+(2-1) shows the most centrally concentrated structure, followed by N2H+(1-0) and DCO+(2-1), which show similar spatial extent, and H13CO+(1-0). The non-thermal contribution to the velocity dispersion increases from higher to…
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