JCMT 850 $\micron$ continuum observations of density structures in the G35 molecular complex
Xianjin Shen, Hong-Li Liu, Zhiyuan Ren, Anandmayee Tej, Di Li, Hauyu, Baobab Liu, Gary A. Fuller, Jinjin Xie, Sihan Jiao, Aiyuan Yang, Patrick M., Koch, Fengwei Xu, Patricio Sanhueza, Pham N. Diep, Nicolas Peretto, Ram K., Yadav, Busaba H. Kramer, Koichiro Sugiyama

TL;DR
This study uses JCMT 850 micron data to analyze filamentary structures and dense clumps in the G35 molecular complex, revealing their physical properties and relation to high-mass star formation, with implications for turbulence and feedback effects.
Contribution
First systematic analysis of filaments and clumps in G35 using JCMT data, highlighting their physical properties and role in high-mass star formation.
Findings
Filaments' mass-length relation suggests turbulent origin.
High line mass filaments deviate due to feedback.
Massive, dense clumps are preferentially located in filaments and hubs.
Abstract
Filaments are believed to play a key role in high-mass star formation. We present a systematic study of the filaments and their hosting clumps in the G35 molecular complex using JCMT SCUBA-2 850 continuum data. We identified five clouds in the complex and 91 filaments within them, some of which form 10 hub-filament systems (HFSs), each with at least 3 hub-composing filaments. We also compiled a catalogue of 350 dense clumps, 183 of which are associated with the filaments. We investigated the physical properties of the filaments and clumps, such as mass, density, and size, and their relation to star formation. We find that the global mass-length trend of the filaments is consistent with a turbulent origin, while the hub-composing filaments of high line masses (\,230\,) in HFSs deviate from this relation, possibly due to feedback from…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhase Equilibria and Thermodynamics · Medical Imaging Techniques and Applications
