ALMAGAL V. Relations between the core populations and the parent clump physical properties
D. Elia, A. Coletta, S. Molinari, E. Schisano, M. Benedettini, \'A. S\'anchez-Monge, A. Traficante, C. Mininni, A. Nucara, S. Pezzuto, P. Schilke, J. D. Soler, A. Avison, M. T. Beltr\'an, H. Beuther, S. Clarke, G. A. Fuller, R. S. Klessen, R. Kuiper, U. Lebreuilly, D. C. Lis

TL;DR
This study investigates how the physical properties and evolutionary stages of massive molecular clumps influence their fragmentation into cores, revealing that density and evolution significantly affect core formation and growth.
Contribution
It provides a large-scale statistical analysis linking clump properties with core fragmentation, supporting density-driven fragmentation and ongoing core growth during evolution.
Findings
Fragmentation correlates with clump surface density.
Core mass and formation efficiency increase with evolutionary indicators.
Core growth continues throughout clump evolution.
Abstract
Context. The fragmentation of massive molecular clumps into smaller, potentially star-forming cores plays a key role in the processes of high-mass star formation. The ALMAGAL project offers high-resolution data to investigate these processes across various evolutionary stages in the Galactic plane. Aims. This study aims at correlating the fragmentation properties of massive clumps, obtained from ALMA observations, with their global physical parameters (e.g., mass, surface density, and temperature) and evolutionary indicators (such as luminosity-to-mass ratio and bolometric temperature) obtained from Herschel observations. It seeks to assess whether the cores evolve in number and mass in tandem with their host clumps, and to determine the possible factors influencing the formation of massive cores (M > 24M_\odot). Methods. We analyzed the masses of 6348 fragments, estimated from 1.4 mm…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astro and Planetary Science
