Kinetic temperature of massive star-forming molecular clumps measured with formaldehyde V. The massive filament DR21
X. Zhao, X. D. Tang, C. Henkel, Y. Gong, Y. Lin, D. L. Li, Y. X. He,, Y. P. Ao, X. Lu, T. Liu, Y. Sun, K. Wang, X. P. Chen, J. Esimbek, J. J. Zhou,, J. W. Wu, J. J. Qiu, X. W. Zheng, J. S. Li, C. S. Luo, and Q. Zhao

TL;DR
This study maps the kinetic temperature of dense gas in the DR21 filament using formaldehyde lines, revealing internal heating by star formation and shocks, with temperature structures similar to other star-forming regions.
Contribution
It provides detailed kinetic temperature maps of DR21's dense gas using para-H2CO, highlighting internal heating mechanisms and shock influences, expanding understanding of star formation environments.
Findings
Dense gas temperatures are higher than those derived from NH3 and FIR data.
Temperature gradients in cores suggest internal star formation heating.
Shocks from the DR21 flow contribute to gas heating.
Abstract
The kinetic temperature structure of the massive filament DR21 has been mapped using the IRAM 30 m telescope. This mapping employed the para-HCO triplet ( = 3--2, 3--2, and 3--2) on a scale of 0.1 pc. By modeling the averaged line ratios of para-HCO with RADEX under non-LTE assumptions, the kinetic temperature of the dense gas was derived at a density of (H) = 10 cm. The para-HCO lines reveal significantly higher temperatures than NH (1,1)/(2,2) and FIR wavelengths. The dense clumps appear to correlate with the notable kinetic temperature. Among the four dense cores (N44, N46, N48, and N54), temperature gradients are observed on a scale of 0.1-0.3 pc. This suggests that the warm dense gas is influenced by internal star formation activity. With the exception of N54, the…
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