Properties of the dense core population in Orion B as seen by the Herschel Gould Belt survey
V. Konyves, Ph. Andre, D. Arzoumanian, N. Schneider, A. Men'shchikov,, S. Bontemps, B. Ladjelate, P. Didelon, S. Pezzuto, M. Benedettini, A. Bracco,, J. Di Francesco, S. Goodwin, K. L. J. Rygl, Y. Shimajiri, L. Spinoglio, D., Ward-Thompson, G. J. White

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel data to analyze dense cores in Orion B, revealing their properties, formation efficiency, and spatial distribution, with implications for star formation processes in filamentary molecular clouds.
Contribution
First detailed Herschel-based analysis of dense cores in Orion B, including core properties, mass function, and formation efficiency transition related to background extinction.
Findings
Prestellar cores peak at ~0.5 solar masses.
Prestellar core formation efficiency increases with background extinction.
Most prestellar cores are associated with filaments.
Abstract
We present a detailed study of the Orion B clouds (d~400 pc), imaged with the PACS/SPIRE cameras at 70-500 m by the Herschel Gould Belt survey (HGBS). We release new high-res. maps of column density and dust temperature. In the filamentary sub-regions NGC2023/2024, NGC2068/2071, and L1622, 1768 starless dense cores were identified, ~28-45% of which are self-gravitating prestellar cores. A total of 76 protostellar dense cores were also found. The typical lifetime of the prestellar cores was found to be Myr. The prestellar core mass function (CMF) peaks at ~0.5 and is consistent with a power law with log slope -1.270.24 at the high-mass end, compared to the Salpeter slope of -1.35. In this region, we confirm the existence of a transition in prestellar core formation efficiency (CFE) around a fiducial value A_V_bg~7 mag in background…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
