ALMA observations reveal no preferred outflow--filament and outflow--magnetic field orientations
T. Baug, Ke Wang, Tie Liu, Mengyao Tang, Qizhou Zhang, Di Li,, Eswaraiah Chakali, Sheng-Yuan Liu, Anandmayee Tej, Paul F. Goldsmith,, Leonardo Bronfman, Sheng-Li Qin, Viktor L. Toth, Pak-Shing Li, Kee-Tae Kim

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA observations to analyze the orientations of outflows in massive star-forming regions, finding no preferred alignment with filaments or magnetic fields, suggesting a complex interplay in evolved clusters.
Contribution
First statistical analysis of outflow orientations relative to filaments and magnetic fields in evolved massive star-forming regions using ALMA data.
Findings
Outflows show no preferred orientation with respect to filaments.
Outflows are randomly oriented relative to magnetic fields.
No correlation between outflow directions and Galactic plane position.
Abstract
We present a statistical study on the orientation of outflows with respect to large-scale filaments and the magnetic fields. Although filaments are widely observed toward Galactic star-forming regions, the exact role of filaments in star formation is unclear. Studies toward low-mass star-forming regions revealed both preferred and random orientation of outflows respective to the filament long-axes, while outflows in massive star-forming regions mostly oriented perpendicular to the host filaments, and parallel to the magnetic fields at similar physical scales. Here, we explore outflows in a sample of 11 protoclusters in HII regions, a more evolved stage compared to IRDCs, using ALMA CO (3-2) line observations. We identify a total of 105 outflow lobes in these protoclusters. Among the 11 targets, 7 are embedded within parsec-scale filamentary structures detected in CO line and 870…
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