Flow of gas detected from beyond the filaments to protostellar scales in Barnard 5
M. T. Valdivia-Mena, J. E. Pineda, D. M. Segura-Cox, P. Caselli, A., Schmiedeke, S. Choudhury, S. S. R. Offner, R. Neri, A. Goodman, G. A. Fuller

TL;DR
This study reveals how gas flows from larger dense cores through filaments and streamers to protostellar disks in Barnard 5, highlighting the environment's role in star formation and ongoing accretion processes.
Contribution
It provides new observational evidence of gas flow from dense cores to protostars via filaments and streamers, connecting large-scale structures to disk scales.
Findings
HC₃N traces infall toward filaments and flow along them
Discovery of a ~2800 au streamer depositing gas onto the disk
Gas can flow from dense core to protostar beyond the envelope
Abstract
The infall of gas from outside natal cores has proven to feed protostars after the main accretion phase (Class 0). This changes our view of star formation to a picture that includes asymmetric accretion (streamers), and a larger role of the environment. However, the connection between streamers and the filaments that prevail in star-forming regions is unknown. We investigate the flow of material toward the filaments within Barnard 5 (B5) and the infall from the envelope to the protostellar disk of the embedded protostar B5-IRS1. Our goal is to follow the flow of material from the larger, dense core scale, to the protostellar disk scale. We present new HCN line data from the NOEMA and 30m telescopes covering the coherence zone of B5, together with ALMA HCO and CO maps toward the protostellar envelope. We fit multiple Gaussian components to the lines so as to decompose…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpace Exploration and Technology · Astro and Planetary Science
