The Formation of Stars -- From Filaments to Cores to Protostars and Protoplanetry Disks
James Di Francesco (NRC), Helen Kirk (NRC), Doug Johnstone (NRC),, Ralph Pudritz (McMaster), Shantanu Basu (Western), Sarah Sadavoy (Queen's),, Laura Fissel (Queen's), Lewis Knee (NRC), Mehrnoosh Tahani (NRC), Rachel, Friesen (Toronto), Simon Coud\'e (SOFIA-USRA)

TL;DR
This paper reviews the current understanding of star formation processes, emphasizing the role of various physical mechanisms and outlining key questions and facilities for future research in the field.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of Canada's leadership in star formation research and identifies critical questions and recommended facilities for advancing the field.
Findings
Canada has demonstrated strong observational and theoretical leadership in star formation.
Five key questions are identified to guide future research in star formation.
Recommendations include involvement in specific observational facilities like ALMA and SKA1.
Abstract
Star formation involves the flow of gas and dust within molecular clouds into protostars and young stellar objects (YSOs) due to gravity. Along the way, these flows are shaped significantly by many other mechanisms, including pressure, turbulent motions, magnetic fields, stellar feedback, jets, and angular momentum. How all these mechanisms interact nonlinearly with each other on various length scales leads to the formation and evolution of substructures within clouds, including filaments, clumps, cores, disks, outflows, the protostars/YSOs themselves, and planets. In this white paper, prepared for the 2020 Long Range Plan panel which will recommend Canada's future directions for astronomy, we describe the observational and theoretical leadership in the star formation field that Canada's vibrant community has demonstrated over the past decade. Drawing from this extensive background, we…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies
