Implication of the velocity dispersion scalings on high-mass star formation in molecular clouds
An-Xu Luo, Hong-Li Liu, Sheng-Li Qin, Dong-Ting Yang, Sirong Pan

TL;DR
This study investigates how velocity dispersion scaling relations in molecular clouds influence high-mass star formation, revealing a transition from turbulence-dominated to gravity-driven processes across different scales.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of velocity dispersion scalings across multiple spatial scales, linking them to the evolutionary stages of molecular cloud structures and star formation mechanisms.
Findings
Velocity dispersion increases with evolutionary stage of clumps.
The $\sigma$--$R$ relation supports multiscale high-mass star formation models.
Clouds transition from over-virial to sub-virial states as they become denser.
Abstract
This paper is aimed at exploring implications of velocity dispersion scalings on high-mass star formation in molecular clouds, including the scalings of Larson's linewidth--size (--) and ratio--mass surface density (--; here ). We have systematically analyzed the parameter of well-selected 221 massive clumps, complemented with published samples of other hierarchical density structures of molecular clouds over spatial scales of 0.01--10 pc. Those massive clumps are classified into four phases: quiescent, protostellar, HII region, and PDR clumps in an evolutionary sequence. The velocity dispersion of clumps increases overall with the evolutionary sequence, reflecting enhanced stellar feedback in more evolved phases. The relations of -- and -- are weak with the clump sample alone, but become evident…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Space Exploration and Technology
