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On the Scarcity of Dense Cores (n > 105 cm−3) in High-latitude Planck Galactic Cold Clumps

Authors :
Fengwei Xu
Ke Wang
Tie Liu
David Eden
Xunchuan Liu
Mika Juvela
Jinhua He
Doug Johnstone
Paul Goldsmith
Guido Garay
Yuefang Wu
Archana Soam
Alessio Traficante
Isabelle Ristorcelli
Edith Falgarone
Huei-Ru Vivien Chen
Naomi Hirano
Yasuo Doi
Woojin Kwon
Glenn J. White
Anthony Whitworth
Patricio Sanhueza
Mark G. Rawlings
Dana Alina
Zhiyuan Ren
Chang Won Lee
Ken’ichi Tatematsu
Chuan-Peng Zhang
Jianjun Zhou
Shih-Ping Lai
Derek Ward-Thompson
Sheng-Yuan Liu
Qilao Gu
Eswaraiah Chakali
Lei Zhu
Diego Mardones
L. Viktor Tóth
Source :
The Astrophysical Journal Letters, Vol 963, Iss 1, p L9 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
IOP Publishing, 2024.

Abstract

High-latitude (∣ b ∣ > 30°) molecular clouds have virial parameters that exceed 1, but whether these clouds can form stars has not been studied systematically. Using JCMT SCUBA-2 archival data, we surveyed 70 fields that target high-latitude Planck Galactic cold clumps (HLPCs) to find dense cores with density of 10 ^5 –10 ^6 cm ^−3 and size of 1 × 10 ^21 cm ^−2 ). At an average rms of 15 mJy beam ^−1 , we detected Galactic dense cores in only one field, G6.04+36.77 (L183) while also identifying 12 extragalactic objects and two young stellar objects. Compared to the low-latitude clumps, dense cores are scarce in HLPCs. With synthetic observations, the densities of cores are constrained to be n _c ≲ 10 ^5 cm ^−3 should they exist in HLPCs. Low-latitude clumps, Taurus clumps, and HLPCs form a sequence where a higher virial parameter corresponds to a lower dense-core detection rate. If HLPCs were affected by the Local Bubble, the scarcity should favor turbulence-inhibited rather than supernova-driven star formation. Studies of the formation mechanism of the L183 molecular cloud are warranted.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20418213 and 20418205
Volume :
963
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
The Astrophysical Journal Letters
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.8e3aa8d23bb6459c80060fd043424f16
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/ad21e6