Evidence for Core-Core Collision in Barnard 68
Dalei Li, Christian Henkel, Alexander Kraus, Xindi Tang, Willem Baan,, Jarken Esimbek, Ke Wang, Gang Wu, Tie Liu, Andrej M. Sobolev, Jianjun Zhou,, Yuxin He, and Toktarkhan Komesh

TL;DR
This study provides observational evidence supporting the core-core collision scenario in Barnard 68, revealing velocity components, rotation, and shock-induced chemical enhancements through molecular line mapping.
Contribution
First observational confirmation of core-core collision in B68 using SO emission line mapping and detailed kinematic and chemical analysis.
Findings
Detection of three velocity components in B68.
Velocity difference matches previous simulation predictions.
Chemical evidence of shock waves at the collision interface.
Abstract
The prestellar core Barnard 68 (B68) is a prototypical source to study the initial conditions and chemical processes of star formation. A previous numerical simulation suggested the southeastern bullet is impacting on the main body of B68. In order to obtain more observational evidence, mapping observations of the ground state SO () emission line at 30 GHz were made with the Effelsberg 100 m telescope. Based on the velocity field and channel maps derived from SO, three velocity components were clearly detected. The velocity field of the main body indicates rotation and is well fitted by a solid-body rotation model. The measured radial velocity difference between the bullet and the main core is about 0.4 km s, which is almost equal to the velocity obtained by the previous numerical simulation. Therefore, the bullet is most likely impacting onto the rotating main body of…
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