Core fragmentation and Toomre stability analysis of W3(H2O): A case study of the IRAM NOEMA large program CORE
A. Ahmadi, H. Beuther, J. C. Mottram, F. Bosco, H. Linz, Th. Henning,, J. M. Winters, R. Kuiper, R. Pudritz, \'A. S\'anchez-Monge, E. Keto, M., Beltran, S. Bontemps, R. Cesaroni, T. Csengeri, S. Feng, R. Galvan-Madrid, K., G. Johnston, P. Klaassen, S. Leurini, S. N. Longmore

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution millimeter observations to analyze core fragmentation and stability in the high-mass star-forming region W3(H2O), revealing evidence of gravitational instability and potential disk fragmentation.
Contribution
It provides a detailed case study of W3(H2O), combining spectral line and dust continuum data to analyze core fragmentation and Toomre stability at high spatial resolution.
Findings
W3(H2O) fragments into two cores separated by ~2300 AU.
Rotational structures show signs of differential rotation and potential disk-like features.
Regions near the outer boundaries are Toomre unstable, indicating possible further fragmentation.
Abstract
The fragmentation mode of high-mass molecular clumps and the properties of the central rotating structures surrounding the most luminous objects have yet to be comprehensively characterised. Using the IRAM NOrthern Extended Millimeter Array (NOEMA) and the IRAM 30-m telescope, the CORE survey has obtained high-resolution observations of 20 well-known highly luminous star-forming regions in the 1.37 mm wavelength regime in both line and dust continuum emission. We present the spectral line setup of the CORE survey and a case study for W3(H2O). At ~0.35" (700 AU at 2 kpc) resolution, the W3(H2O) clump fragments into two cores (West and East), separated by ~2300 AU. Velocity shifts of a few km/s are observed in the dense-gas tracer, CH3CN, across both cores, consistent with rotation and perpendicular to the directions of two bipolar outflows, one emanating from each core. The kinematics of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Molecular Spectroscopy and Structure · Atmospheric Ozone and Climate
