Triggered high-mass star formation in the HII region W28A2: A cloud-cloud collision scenario
Katsuhiro Hayashi, Satoshi Yoshiike, Rei Enokiya, Shinji Fujita, Rin, Yamada, Hidetoshi Sano, Kazufumi Torii, Mikito Kohno, Atsushi Nishimura, Akio, Ohama, Hiroaki Yamamoto, Kengo Tachihara, Graeme Wong, Nigel Maxted,, Catherine Braiding, Gavin Rowell, Michael Burton, Yasuo Fukui

TL;DR
This study investigates high-mass star formation in the W28A2 HII region, proposing that a cloud-cloud collision triggered the formation of massive stars, supported by molecular cloud observations and gas distribution analysis.
Contribution
It presents evidence for a cloud-cloud collision scenario as the trigger for high-mass star formation in W28A2, a novel interpretation for this region.
Findings
Identification of three velocity components in molecular clouds.
Detection of bridging features indicating cloud interactions.
Spatial correlation between gas features and star-forming regions.
Abstract
We report on a study of the high-mass star formation in the the HII region W28A2 by investigating the molecular clouds extended over ~5-10 pc from the exciting stars using the 12CO and 13CO (J=1-0) and 12CO (J=2-1) data taken by the NANTEN2 and Mopra observations. These molecular clouds consist of three velocity components with the CO intensity peaks at V_LSR ~ -4 km s, 9 km s and 16 km s. The highest CO intensity is detected at V_LSR ~ 9 km s, where the high-mass stars with the spectral types of O6.5-B0.5 are embedded. We found bridging features connecting these clouds toward the directions of the exciting sources. Comparisons of the gas distributions with the radio continuum emission and 8 um infrared emission show spatial coincidence/anti-coincidence, suggesting physical associations between the gas and the exciting sources. The 12CO J=2-1 to 1-0 intensity…
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.
