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ALMA Reveals Sequential High-mass Star Formation in the G9.62+0.19 Complex.

Authors :
Tie Liu
John Lacy
Pak Shing Li
Ke Wang
Sheng-Li Qin
Qizhou Zhang
Kee-Tae Kim
Guido Garay
Yuefang Wu
Diego Mardones
Qingfeng Zhu
Ken’ichi Tatematsu
Tomoya Hirota
Zhiyuan Ren
Sheng-Yuan Liu
Huei-Ru Chen
Yu-Nung Su
Di Li
Source :
Astrophysical Journal; 11/1/2017, Vol. 849 Issue 1, p1-1, 1p
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Stellar feedback from high-mass stars (e.g., H ii regions) can strongly influence the surrounding interstellar medium and regulate star formation. Our new ALMA observations reveal sequential high-mass star formation taking place within one subvirial filamentary clump (the G9.62 clump) in the G9.62+0.19 complex. The 12 dense cores (MM1–MM12) detected by ALMA are at very different evolutionary stages, from the starless core phase to the UC H ii region phase. Three dense cores (MM6, MM7/G, MM8/F) are associated with outflows. The mass–velocity diagrams of the outflows associated with MM7/G and MM8/F can be well-fit by broken power laws. The mass–velocity diagram of the SiO outflow associated with MM8/F breaks much earlier than other outflow tracers (e.g., CO, SO, CS, HCN), suggesting that SiO traces newly shocked gas, while the other molecular lines (e.g., CO, SO, CS, HCN) mainly trace the ambient gas continuously entrained by outflow jets. Five cores (MM1, MM3, MM5, MM9, MM10) are massive starless core candidates whose masses are estimated to be larger than 25 M<subscript>☉</subscript>, assuming a dust temperature of ≤20 K. The shocks from the expanding H ii regions (“B” and “C”) to the west may have a great impact on the G9.62 clump by compressing it into a filament and inducing core collapse successively, leading to sequential star formation. Our findings suggest that stellar feedback from H ii regions may enhance the star formation efficiency and suppress low-mass star formation in adjacent pre-existing massive clumps. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0004637X
Volume :
849
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Astrophysical Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
126012628
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/aa8d73