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ALMA Survey of Orion Planck Galactic Cold Clumps (ALMASOP): Detection of extremely high density compact structure of prestellar cores and multiple substructures within

Authors :
Sahu, Dipen
Liu, Sheng-Yuan
Liu, Tie
Evans II, Neal J.
Hirano, Naomi
Tatematsu, Ken'ichi
Lee, Chin-Fei
Kim, Kee-Tae
Dutta, Somnath
Alina, Dana
Bronfman, Leonardo
Cunningham, Maria
Eden, David J.
Garay, Guido
Goldsmith, Paul F.
He, Jinhua
Hsu, Shih-Ying
Jhan, Kai-Syun
Johnstone, Doug
Juvela, Mika
Kim, Gwanjeong
Kuan, Yi-Jehng
Kwon, Woojin
Lee, Chang Won
Lee, Jeong-Eun
Li, Di
Li, Pak Shing
Li, Shanghuo
Luo, Qiu-Yi
Montillaud, Julien
Moraghan, Anthony
Pelkonen, Veli-Matti
Qin, Sheng-Li
Ristorcelli, Isabelle
Sanhueza, Patricio
Shang, Hsien
Shen, Zhi-Qiang
Soam, Archana
Wu, Yuefang
Zhang, Qizhou
Zhou, Jianjun
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Prestellar cores are self-gravitating dense and cold structures within molecular clouds where future stars are born. They are expected, at the stage of transitioning to the protostellar phase, to harbor centrally concentrated dense (sub)structures that will seed the formation of a new star or the binary/multiple stellar systems. Characterizing this critical stage of evolution is key to our understanding of star formation. In this work, we report the detection of high density (sub)structures on the thousand-au scale in a sample of dense prestellar cores. Through our recent ALMA observations towards the Orion molecular cloud, we have found five extremely dense prestellar cores, which have centrally concentrated regions $\sim$ 2000 au in size, and several $10^7$ $cm^{-3}$ in average density. Masses of these centrally dense regions are in the range of 0.30 to 6.89 M$_\odot$. {\it For the first time}, our higher resolution observations (0.8$'' \sim $ 320 au) further reveal that one of the cores shows clear signatures of fragmentation; such individual substructures/fragments have sizes of 800 -1700 au, masses of 0.08 to 0.84 M$_\odot$, densities of $2 - 8\times 10^7$ $cm^{-3}$ and separations of $\sim 1200$ au. The substructures are massive enough ($\gtrsim 0.1~M_\odot$) to form young stellar objects and are likely examples of the earliest stage of stellar embryos which can lead to widely ($\sim$ 1200 au) separated multiple systems.<br />Comment: Published in The Astrophysical Journal Letters (ApJL)

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2012.08737
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/abd3aa