AFGL 5180 and AFGL 6366S: sites of hub-filament systems at the opposite edges of a filamentary cloud
A. K. Maity, L. K. Dewangan, N. K. Bhadari, D. K. Ojha, Z. Chen, and, Rakesh Pandey

TL;DR
This study investigates the role of cloud-cloud collision and hub-filament systems in massive star formation at the edges of a filamentary cloud, using multi-wavelength observations revealing early star formation signatures and cloud interactions.
Contribution
It provides new evidence supporting cloud-cloud collision as a trigger for massive star formation and hub-filament system formation in the studied regions.
Findings
Detection of hub-filament systems at both sites.
Evidence of cloud-cloud collision approximately 1 million years ago.
Minimal impact of nearby massive star's feedback on the filament.
Abstract
We present a multi-scale and multi-wavelength study to unveil massive star formation (MSF) processes around sites AFGL 5180, and AFGL 6366S, both hosting a Class II 6.7 GHz methanol maser emission. The radio continuum map at 8.46 GHz reveals a small cluster of radio sources toward AFGL 5180. Signatures of the early stages of MSF in our target sites are spatially seen at the opposite edges of a filamentary cloud (length 5 pc), which is observed in the sub-millimeter dust continuum maps. Using the near-infrared photometric data, the spatial distribution of young stellar objects is found toward the entire filament, primarily clustered at its edges. The getsf utility on the Herschel far-infrared images reveals a hub-filament system (HFS) toward each target site. The analysis of the molecular line data, which benefits from large area coverage (1 degree 1 degree), detects…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Atmospheric Ozone and Climate
