Back to Search Start Over

Evidence of high-mass star formation through multi-scale mass accretion in hub-filament-system clouds

Authors :
Hong-Li Liu
Anandmayee Tej
Tie Liu
Patricio Sanhueza
Sheng-Li Qin
Jinhua He
Paul F Goldsmith
Guido Garay
Sirong Pan
Kaho Morii
Shanghuo Li
Amelia Stutz
Ken’ichi Tatematsu
Feng-Wei Xu
Leonardo Bronfman
Anindya Saha
Namitha Issac
Tapas Baug
L Viktor Toth
Lokesh Dewangan
Ke Wang
Jianwen Zhou
Chang Won Lee
Dongting Yang
Anxu Luo
Xianjin Shen
Yong Zhang
Yue-Fang Wu
Zhiyuan Ren
Xun-Chuan Liu
Archana Soam
Siju Zhang
Qiu-Yi Luo
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

We present a statistical study of a sample of 17 hub-filament-system (HFS) clouds of high-mass star formation using high-angular resolution ($\sim$1-2 arcsecond) ALMA 1.3mm and 3mm continuum data. The sample includes 8 infrared (IR)-dark and 9 IR-bright types, which correspond to an evolutionary sequence from the IR-dark to IR-bright stage. The central massive clumps and their associated most massive cores are observed to follow a trend of increasing mass ($M$) and mass surface density ($\Sigma$) with evolution from IR-dark to IR-bright stage. In addition, a mass-segregated cluster of young stellar objects (YSOs) are revealed in both IR-dark and IR-bright HFSs with massive YSOs located in the hub and the population of low-mass YSOs distributed over larger areas. Moreover, outflow feedback in all HFSs are found to escape preferentially through the inter-filamentary diffuse cavities, suggesting that outflows would render a limited effect on the disruption of the HFSs and ongoing high-mass star formation therein. From the above observations, we suggest that high-mass star formation in the HFSs can be described by a multi-scale mass accretion/transfer scenario, from hub-composing filaments through clumps down to cores, that can naturally lead to a mass-segregated cluster of stars.<br />Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS; 16 pages, 8 figures, and 3 tables

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....838e486d44e64654253145d76d28285e