Feedback from protoclusters does not significantly change the kinematic properties of the embedded dense gas structures
J. W. Zhou, S. Dib, F. Wyrowski, T. Liu, S. H. Li, P. Sanhueza, M., Juvela, F. W. Xu, H. L. Liu, T. Baug, Y. P. Peng, K. M. Menten, L. Bronfman,, and C. W. Lee

TL;DR
This study investigates how feedback from protoclusters influences the kinematics of dense gas structures, finding that despite strong feedback, gravitational collapse persists and structural reorganization occurs.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis showing that feedback from HII regions does not significantly alter the physical properties of dense gas structures across evolutionary stages.
Findings
Velocity dispersion correlates strongly with $ ext{N} imes R$
Ionized gas feedback is stronger than other mechanisms
Feedback does not significantly change dense gas properties
Abstract
A total of 64 ATOMS sources at different evolutionary stages were selected to investigate the kinematics and dynamics of gas structures under feedback. We identified dense gas structures based on the integrated intensity map of HCO J=1-0 emission, and then extracted the average spectra of all structures to investigate their velocity components and gas kinematics. For the scaling relations between velocity dispersion , effective radius and column density of all structures, always has a stronger correlation compared to and . There are significant correlations between velocity dispersion and column density, which may imply that the velocity dispersion originates from gravitational collapse, also revealed by the velocity gradients. The measured velocity gradients for dense gas structures in early-stage sources and late-stage…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAtmospheric and Environmental Gas Dynamics · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Methane Hydrates and Related Phenomena
