ALMA Survey of Orion Planck Galactic Cold Clumps (ALMASOP) II. Survey overview: a first look at 1.3 mm continuum maps and molecular outflows
Somnath Dutta, Chin-Fei Lee, Tie Liu, Naomi Hirano, Sheng-Yuan Liu,, Kenichi Tatematsu, Kee-Tae Kim, Hsien Shang, Dipen Sahu, Gwanjeong Kim,, Anthony Moraghan, Kai-Syun Jhan, Shih-Ying Hsu, Neal J. Evans, Doug, Johnstone, Derek Ward-Thompson, Yi-Jehng Kuan, Chang Won Lee

TL;DR
This study presents high-resolution ALMA observations of 72 dense cores in Orion's PGCCs, revealing substructures, evolutionary changes in core properties, and detailed outflow characteristics, advancing understanding of early star formation stages.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed ALMA 1.3 mm continuum and molecular line maps of dense cores in PGCCs, analyzing their substructures, evolution, and outflow dynamics.
Findings
Detected 70 substructures within 48 dense cores.
Observed size and mass reduction of substructures from Class 0 to I.
Found positive correlation between outflow velocity and cavity opening angle.
Abstract
Planck Galactic Cold Clumps (PGCCs) are contemplated to be the ideal targets to probe the early phases of star formation. We have conducted a survey of 72 young dense cores inside PGCCs in the Orion complex with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) at 1.3\,mm (band 6) using three different configurations (resolutions 035, 10, and 70) to statistically investigate their evolutionary stages and sub-structures. We have obtained images of the 1.3\,mm continuum and molecular line emission (CO, and SiO) at an angular resolution of 035 ( 140\,au) with the combined arrays. We find 70 substructures within 48 detected dense cores with median dust-mass 0.093\,M and deconvolved size 027. Dense substructures are clearly detected within the central 1000\,au of four candidate prestellar cores.…
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.
