The SQUALO project (Star formation in QUiescent And Luminous Objects) I: clump-fed accretion mechanism in high-mass star-forming objects
A. Traficante, B. M. Jones, A. Avison, G. A. Fuller, M. Benedettini,, D. Elia, S. Molinari, N. Peretto, S. Pezzuto, T. Pillai, K. L. J. Rygl, E., Schisano, R. J. Smith

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA observations to investigate the formation of massive stars, supporting a clump-fed accretion mechanism where fragmentation and dynamical processes play key roles.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence for a dynamical, multi-scale accretion process in high-mass star formation, emphasizing the importance of fragmentation and turbulence.
Findings
Young clumps show early fragmentation.
Fragment properties are tightly correlated with parent clumps.
Fragment separation decreases with evolution, indicating dynamical processes.
Abstract
The formation mechanism of the most massive stars is far from completely understood. It is still unclear if the formation is core-fed or clump-fed, i.e. if the process is an extension of what happens in low-mass stars, or if the process is more dynamical such as a continuous, multi-scale accretion from the gas at parsec (or even larger) scales. In this context we introduce the SQUALO project, an ALMA 1.3 mm and 3 mm survey designed to investigate the properties of 13 massive clumps selected at various evolutionary stages, with the common feature that they all show evidence for accretion at the clump scale. In this work we present the results obtained from the 1.3 mm continuum data. Our observations identify 55 objects with masses in the range 0.4 <~ M <~ 309 M_sun, with evidence that the youngest clumps already present some degree of fragmentation. The data show that physical properties…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Scientific Research and Discoveries · Astro and Planetary Science
