ATOMS: ALMA Three-millimeter Observations of Massive Star-forming regions -- XI. From inflow to infall in hub-filament systems
Jian-Wen Zhou, Tie Liu, Neal J. Evans II, Guido Garay, Paul F., Goldsmith, Gilberto C. Gomez, Enrique Vazquez-Semadeni, Hong-Li Liu, Amelia, M. Stutz, Ke Wang, Mika Juvela, Jinhua He, Di Li, Leonardo Bronfman, Xunchuan, Liu, Feng-Wei Xu, Anandmayee Tej, L. K. Dewangan

TL;DR
This study reveals that hub-filament systems are common in proto-clusters and evolve with feedback, showing velocity gradients that suggest gravitational infall at small scales, which may be crucial for high-mass star formation.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of hub-filament systems across multiple scales in proto-clusters, highlighting their evolution and role in star formation.
Findings
Filaments are ubiquitous in proto-clusters.
Hub-filament systems decrease with increasing stellar feedback.
Velocity gradients indicate gravitational infall at small scales.
Abstract
We investigate the presence of hub-filament systems in a large sample of 146 active proto-clusters, using HCO J=1-0 molecular line data obtained from the ATOMS survey. We find that filaments are ubiquitous in proto-clusters, and hub-filament systems are very common from dense core scales (0.1 pc) to clump/cloud scales (1-10 pc). The proportion of proto-clusters containing hub-filament systems decreases with increasing dust temperature () and luminosity-to-mass ratios () of clumps, indicating that stellar feedback from H{\sc ii} regions gradually destroys the hub-filament systems as proto-clusters evolve. Clear velocity gradients are seen along the longest filaments with a mean velocity gradient of 8.71 km spc and a median velocity gradient of 5.54 km spc. We find that velocity gradients are small for filament lengths larger…
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