ALMA-IMF IV -- A comparative study of the main hot cores in W43-MM1: detection, temperature and molecular composition
N. Brouillet, D. Despois, J. Molet, T. Nony, F. Motte, A. Gusdorf, F., Louvet, S. Bontemps, F. Herpin, M. Bonfand, T. Csengeri, A. Ginsburg, N., Cunningham, R. Galvan-Madrid, L. Maud, G. Busquet, L. Bronfman, M., Fernandez-Lopez, D. L. Jeff, B. Lefloch, Y. Pouteau, P. Sanhueza

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution ALMA data to identify and compare hot cores in W43-MM1, revealing similar chemical compositions across cores despite mass differences, and highlighting the role of shocks and UV irradiation in molecular emission.
Contribution
It provides a systematic comparison of molecular composition and temperature in hot cores within W43-MM1, emphasizing the uniformity of chemical makeup across diverse core masses.
Findings
All hot cores have similar excitation temperatures (120-160 K).
Complex organic molecule line intensities vary up to 30-fold, but emission is consistent within a factor of 2-3.
CH3CCH traces the envelope with lower temperatures (50-90 K).
Abstract
W43-MM1 is a young region, very rich in terms of high-mass star formation. We aim to systematically identify the massive cores which contain a hot core and compare their molecular composition. We used ALMA high-spatial resolution (2500 au) data of W43-MM1 to identify line-rich protostellar cores and make a comparative study of their temperature and molecular composition. The identification of hot cores is based on both the spatial distribution of the complex organic molecules and the contribution of molecular lines relative to the continuum intensity. We rely on the analysis of CH3CN and CH3CCH to estimate the temperatures of the selected cores. Finally, we rescale the spectra of the different hot cores based on their CH3OCHO line intensities to directly compare the detections and line intensities of the other species. W43-MM1 turns out to be a region rich in massive hot cores with at…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Atmospheric Ozone and Climate · Molecular Spectroscopy and Structure
