Fragmentation and kinematics in high-mass star formation: CORE-extension targeting two very young high-mass star-forming regions
H. Beuther, C. Gieser, S. Suri, H. Linz, P. Klaassen, D. Semenov, J.M., Winters, Th. Henning, J.D. Soler, J.S. Urquhart, J. Syed, S .Feng, T., Moeller, M.T.Beltran, A. Sanchez-Monge, S.N.Longmore, T.Peters, J., Ballesteros-Paredes, P. Schilke, L. Moscadelli, A. Palau

TL;DR
This study investigates the early stages of high-mass star formation by analyzing fragmentation and kinematics in two young regions, revealing core properties consistent with dynamical collapse and thermal Jeans fragmentation.
Contribution
The paper provides high-resolution observations of two very young high-mass star-forming regions, offering new insights into their fragmentation patterns and kinematic behaviors during early evolution.
Findings
29 cores resolved along filament-like structures
Core masses follow a mass-size relation consistent with thermal Jeans fragmentation
Kinematic differences explained by a dynamical cloud collapse scenario
Abstract
Context: The formation of high-mass star-forming regions from their parental gas cloud and the subsequent fragmentation processes lie at the heart of star formation research. Aims: We aim to study the dynamical and fragmentation properties at very early evolutionary stages of high-mass star formation. Methods: Employing the NOrthern Extended Millimeter Array (NOEMA) and the IRAM 30m telescope, we observed two young high-mass star-forming regions, ISOSS22478 and ISOSS23053, in the 1.3mm continuum and spectral line emission at a high angular resolution (~0.8''). Results: We resolved 29 cores that are mostly located along filament-like structures. Depending on the temperature assumption, these cores follow a mass-size relation of approximately M~r^2.0, corresponding to constant mean column densities. However, with different temperature assumptions, a steeper mass-size relation up to…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Molecular Spectroscopy and Structure · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
