Unveiling the formation of the massive DR21 ridge
L. Bonne, S. Bontemps, N. Schneider, R. Simon, S. D. Clarke, T., Csengeri, E. Chambers, U. Graf, J. M. Jackson, R. Klein, Y. Okada, A. G. G., M. Tielens, M. Tiwari

TL;DR
This study uses multi-line molecular and atomic gas observations to investigate the formation of the massive DR21 ridge, revealing a curved, flattened gas reservoir influenced by magnetic fields and cloud interactions, which may be common in star formation.
Contribution
It provides a detailed kinematic and structural analysis of the DR21 ridge, proposing a magnetic field bending and cloud collision scenario as a new formation mechanism for high-mass star-forming filaments.
Findings
Sub-filaments are redshifted relative to the dense ridge.
Surrounding gas is organized in a flattened, curved structure.
Magnetic field bending due to cloud interaction explains the velocity field.
Abstract
We present new CO(1-0), CO(1-0), HCO(1-0) and HCO(1-0) maps from the IRAM 30m telescope, and a spectrally-resolved [CII] 158 m map observed with the SOFIA telescope towards the massive DR21 cloud. This traces the kinematics from low- to high-density gas in the cloud which allows to constrain the formation scenario of the high-mass star forming DR21 ridge. The molecular line data reveals that the sub-filaments are systematically redshifted relative to the dense ridge. We demonstrate that [CII] unveils the surrounding CO-poor gas of the dense filaments in the DR21 cloud. We also show that this surrounding gas is organized in a flattened cloud with curved redshifted dynamics perpendicular to the ridge. The sub-filaments thus form in this curved and flattened mass reservoir. A virial analysis of the different lines indicates that self-gravity should…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeophysics and Gravity Measurements · Geological Studies and Exploration · Geological and Geophysical Studies
