ATOMS: ALMA Three-millimeter Observations of Massive Star-forming regions -- VIII. A search for hot cores by using C$_2$H$_5$CN, CH$_3$OCHO and CH$_3$OH lines
Sheng-Li Qin, Tie Liu, Xunchuan Liu, Paul F. Goldsmith, Di Li, Qizhou, Zhang, Hong-Li Liu, Yuefang Wu, Leonardo Bronfman, Mika Juvela, Chang Won, Lee, Guido Garay, Yong Zhang, Jinhua He, Shih-Ying Hsu, Zhi-Qiang Shen,, Jeong-Eun Lee, Ke Wang, Ningyu Tang, Mengyao Tang

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA 3mm observations to identify and analyze 60 hot cores in massive star-forming regions, revealing chemical differentiation, temperature correlations, and heating mechanisms, thus providing a comprehensive hot core template.
Contribution
First large sample of hot cores observed with high resolution and spectral coverage, identifying new hot cores and analyzing their chemical and physical properties.
Findings
45 new hot cores detected with high temperatures and small sizes
Nitrogen and oxygen line emission show differentiation in 29 hot cores
Column densities of molecules increase with temperature and correlate tightly
Abstract
Hot cores characterized by rich lines of complex organic molecules are considered as ideal sites for investigating the physical and chemical environments of massive star formation. We present a search for hot cores by using typical nitrogen- and oxygen-bearing complex organic molecules (CHCN, CHOCHO and CHOH), based on ALMA Three-millimeter Observations of Massive Star-forming regions (ATOMS). The angular resolutions and line sensitivities of the ALMA observations are better than 2 arcsec and 10 mJy/beam, respectively. A total of 60 hot cores are identified with 45 being newly detected, in which the complex organic molecules have high gas temperatures ( 100 K) and small source sizes ( 0.1 pc). So far this is the largest sample of hot cores observed with similar angular resolution and spectral coverage. The observations have also shown nitrogen and oxygen…
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.
