The factors that influence protostellar multiplicity I: Gas temperature, density, and mass in Perseus with Nobeyama
N. M. Murillo, C. M. Fuchs, D. Harsono, N. Sakai, A. Hacar, D., Johnstone, R. Mignon-Risse, S. Zeng, T.-H. Hsieh, Y.-L. Yang, J. J. Tobin and, M. V. Persson

TL;DR
This study investigates how gas temperature, density, and mass influence protostellar multiplicity in Perseus, finding that gas and dust mass correlate with multiplicity, while temperature and density do not.
Contribution
It provides the first systematic analysis linking dense gas physical parameters to protostellar multiplicity at ~5000 AU scales in Perseus.
Findings
Gas and dust mass correlate with multiplicity.
Higher order multiples tend to have higher gas and dust masses.
Temperature and density show no correlation with multiplicity.
Abstract
Protostellar multiplicity is common at all stages and mass ranges. However, the factors that determine the multiplicity of protostellar systems have not been systematically characterized through their molecular gas. Nobeyama 45m Radio Observatory OTF maps of HCN, HNC, HCO, and NH (J = 1--0) toward five subregions in Perseus, complemented with single pointing APEX observations of HNC (J = 4--3) are used to derive physical parameters of the dense gas. Both observations have angular resolutions of 18", equivalent to 5000 AU scales at the distance of Perseus. Kinetic gas temperature is derived from the (HCN)/(HNC) J = 1--0 ratio, and H density is obtained from the HNC J=4--3/J=1--0 ratio. These parameters are used to obtain the NH and HCO gas masses. The inferred and derived parameters are compared to source parameters. Inferred mean kinetic gas…
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.
