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ATOMS: ALMA Three-millimeter Observations of Massive Star-forming regions-IX. A pilot study towards IRDC G034.43+00.24 on multi-scale structures and gas kinematics

Authors :
Liu, Hong-Li
Tej, Anandmayee
Liu, Tie
Goldsmith, Paul F.
Stutz, Amelia
Juvela, Mika
Qin, Sheng-Li
Xu, Feng-Wei
Bronfman, Leonardo
Evans, Neal J.
Saha, Anindya
Issac, Namitha
Tatematsu, Ken'ichi
Wang, Ke
Li, Shanghuo
Zhang, Siju
Baug, Tapas
Dewangan, Lokesh
Wu, Yue-Fang
Zhang, Yong
Lee, Chang Won
Liu, Xun-Chuan
Zhou, Jianwen
Soam, Archana
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

We present a comprehensive study of the gas kinematics associated with density structures at different spatial scales in the filamentary infrared dark cloud, G034.43+00.24 (G34). This study makes use of the H13CO+ (1-0) molecular line data from the ALMA Three-millimeter Observations of Massive Star-forming regions (ATOMS) survey, which has spatial and velocity resolution of 0.04 pc and 0.2 km/s, respectively. Several tens of dendrogram structures have been extracted in the position-position-velocity space of H13CO+, which include 21 small-scale leaves and 20 larger-scale branches. Overall, their gas motions are supersonic but they exhibit the interesting behavior where leaves tend to be less dynamically supersonic than the branches. For the larger-scale, branch structures, the observed velocity-size relation (i.e., velocity variation/dispersion versus size) are seen to follow the Larson scaling exponent while the smaller-scale, leaf structures show a systematic deviation and display a steeper slope. We argue that the origin of the observed kinematics of the branch structures is likely to be a combination of turbulence and gravity-driven ordered gas flows. In comparison, gravity-driven chaotic gas motion is likely at the level of small-scale leaf structures. The results presented in our previous paper and this current follow-up study suggest that the main driving mechanism for mass accretion/inflow observed in G34 varies at different spatial scales. We therefore conclude that a scale-dependent combined effect of turbulence and gravity is essential to explain the star-formation processes in G34.<br />Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, and 1 table. To appear in MNRAS

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2202.11307
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stac378