Transition from Coherent Cores to Surrounding Cloud in L1688
Spandan Choudhury, Jaime E. Pineda, Paola Caselli, Stella S. R., Offner, Erik Rosolowsky, Rachel K. Friesen, Elena Redaelli, Ana, Chac\'on-Tanarro, Yancy Shirley, Anna Punanova, and Helen Kirk

TL;DR
This study investigates the physical transition from dense star-forming cores to their surrounding molecular cloud in L1688, revealing temperature and turbulence variations and extending the known size of coherent cores.
Contribution
It provides new temperature and velocity dispersion maps using NH3 data, and uncovers the extended reach of subsonic turbulence beyond core boundaries.
Findings
The cloud is 4-6 K warmer than cores.
Cores have a fractional NH3 abundance of ~4.2e-9.
Subsonic turbulence extends up to 0.15 pc beyond cores.
Abstract
Stars form in cold dense cores showing subsonic velocity dispersions. The parental molecular clouds display higher temperatures and supersonic velocity dispersions. The transition from core to cloud has been observed in velocity dispersion, but temperature and abundance variations are unknown. We aim to study the transition from cores to ambient cloud in temperature and velocity dispersion using a single tracer. We use NH3 (1,1) and (2,2) maps in L1688 from the Green Bank Ammonia Survey, smoothed to 1', and determine the physical properties from fits. We identify the coherent cores and study the changes in temperature and velocity dispersion from cores to the surrounding cloud. We obtain a kinetic temperature map tracing the extended cloud, improving from previous maps tracing mostly the cores. The cloud is 4-6 K warmer than the cores, and shows a larger velocity dispersion (diff. =…
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