Ubiquitous $\rm NH_3$ supersonic component in L1688 coherent cores
Spandan Choudhury, Jaime E. Pineda, Paola Caselli, Adam Ginsburg,, Stella S. R. Offner, Erik Rosolowsky, Rachel K. Friesen, Felipe O. Alves, Ana, Chac\'on-Tanarro, Anna Punanova, Elena Redaelli, Helen Kirk, Philip C. Myers,, Peter G. Martin, Yancy Shirley, Michael Chun-Yuan Chen

TL;DR
This study reveals a widespread faint supersonic ammonia component in all coherent cores of L1688, significantly impacting the interpretation of their physical properties and stability.
Contribution
It is the first to detect and analyze a faint, broad, supersonic ammonia component in all cores, refining understanding of core kinematics and physical conditions.
Findings
Detected a faint supersonic ammonia component in all cores
Broad component biases estimates of core temperature and velocity dispersion
Neglecting the broad component leads to overestimating core stability
Abstract
Context : Star formation takes place in cold dense cores in molecular clouds. Earlier observations have found that dense cores exhibit subsonic non-thermal velocity dispersions. In contrast, CO observations show that the ambient large-scale cloud is warmer and has supersonic velocity dispersions. Aims : We aim to study the ammonia () molecular line profiles with exquisite sensitivity towards the coherent cores in L1688 in order to study their kinematical properties in unprecedented detail. Methods : We used (1,1) and (2,2) data from the first data release (DR1) in the Green Bank Ammonia Survey (GAS). We first smoothed the data to a larger beam of 1' to obtain substantially more extended maps of velocity dispersion and kinetic temperature, compared to the DR1 maps. We then identified the coherent cores in the cloud and analysed the averaged line profiles towards the…
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