Redshifted methanol absorption tracing infall motions of high-mass star formation regions
W. J. Yang, K. M. Menten, A. Y. Yang, F. Wyrowski, Y. Gong, S. P., Ellingsen, C. Henkel, X. Chen, Y. Xu

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that redshifted methanol absorption effectively traces infall motions in high-mass star formation regions, supporting models of global hierarchical collapse and clump-fed accretion.
Contribution
It shows that methanol transitions can reliably detect infall motions, providing a new tool for studying high-mass star formation dynamics.
Findings
Redshifted methanol absorption observed in multiple transitions.
Infall velocities match previous measurements, confirming reliability.
Supports large-scale inward motions and hierarchical collapse models.
Abstract
Gravitational collapse is one of the most important processes in high-mass star formation. Compared with the classic blue-skewed profiles, redshifted absorption against continuum emission is a more reliable method to detect inward motions within high-mass star formation regions. We aim to test if methanol transitions can be used to trace infall motions within high-mass star formation regions. Using the Effelsberg-100 m, IRAM-30 m, and APEX-12 m telescopes, we carried out observations of 37 and 16 methanol transitions towards two well-known collapsing dense clumps, W31C (G10.6-0.4) and W3(OH), to search for redshifted absorption features or inverse P-Cygni profiles. Redshifted absorption is observed in 14 and 11 methanol transitions towards W31C and W3(OH), respectively. The infall velocities fitted from a simple two-layer model agree with previously reported values derived from other…
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