Nobeyama Survey of Inward Motions toward Cores in Orion Identified by SCUBA-2
Ken'ichi Tatematsu, You-Ting Yeh, Naomi Hirano, Sheng-Yuan Liu, Tie, Liu, Somnath Dutta, Dipen Sahu, Neal J. Evans II, Mika Juvela, Hee-Weon Yi,, Jeong-Eun Lee, Patricio Sanhueza, Shanghuo Li, David Eden, Gwanjeong Kim,, Chin-Fei Lee, Yuefang Wu, Kee-Tae Kim, L. Viktor T'oth

TL;DR
This study surveyed 36 cores in Orion using radio observations to detect inward motions, finding evidence of gravitational collapse in some starless cores through blue-skewed line profiles and velocity offsets.
Contribution
It provides new observational evidence of inward motions in starless cores in Orion, including detailed velocity measurements and identification of cores at advanced collapse stages.
Findings
Inward motions are more common than outward in surveyed cores.
Some starless cores show blue-skewed profiles indicating collapse.
One core exhibits signs of being at the last stage before star formation.
Abstract
In this study, 36 cores (30 starless and 6 protostellar) identified in Orion were surveyed to search for inward motions. We used the Nobeyama 45 m radio telescope, and mapped the cores in the transitions of HCO, HCO, NH, HNC, and HNC. The asymmetry parameter , which was the ratio of the difference between the HCO and HCO peak velocities to the HCO line width, was biased toward negative values, suggesting that inward motions were more dominant than outward motions. Three starless cores (10% of all starless cores surveyed) were identified as cores with blue-skewed line profiles (asymmetric profiles with more intense blue-shifted emission), and another two starless cores (7%) were identified as candidate blue-skewed line profiles. The peak velocity difference between HCO and HCO of them was…
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