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Filamentary structure and Keplerian rotation in the high-mass star-forming region G35.03+0.35 imaged with ALMA

Authors :
Beltran, M. T.
Sanchez-Monge, A.
Cesaroni, R.
Kumar, M. S. N.
Galli, D.
Walmsley, C. M.
Etoka, S.
Furuya, R. S.
Moscadelli, L.
Stanke, T.
van der Tak, F. F. S.
Vig, S.
Wang, K. -S.
Zinnecker, H.
Elia, D.
Schisano, E.
Beltran, M. T.
Sanchez-Monge, A.
Cesaroni, R.
Kumar, M. S. N.
Galli, D.
Walmsley, C. M.
Etoka, S.
Furuya, R. S.
Moscadelli, L.
Stanke, T.
van der Tak, F. F. S.
Vig, S.
Wang, K. -S.
Zinnecker, H.
Elia, D.
Schisano, E.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Context. Theoretical scenarios propose that high-mass stars are formed by disk-mediated accretion. Aims. To test the theoretical predictions on the formation of massive stars, we wish to make a thorough study at high-angular resolution of the structure and kinematics of the dust and gas emission toward the high-mass star-forming region G35.03+0.35, which harbors a disk candidate around a B-type (proto) star. Methods. We carried out ALMA Cycle 0 observations at 870 mu m of dust of typical high-density, molecular outflow, and cloud tracers with resolutions of < 0.5. Complementary Subaru COMICS 25 mu m observations were carried out to trace the mid-infrared emission toward this star-forming region. Results. The submillimeter continuum emission has revealed a filamentary structure fragmented into six cores, called A-F. The filament could be in quasi-equilibrium taking into account that the mass per unit length of the filament, 200-375 M-circle dot/pc, is similar to the critical mass of a thermally and turbulently supported infinite cylinder, similar to 335 M-circle dot/pc. The cores, which are on average separated by similar to 0.02 pc, have deconvolved sizes of 1300-3400 AU, temperatures of 35-240 K, H-2 densities > 10(7) cm(-3), and masses in the range 1-5 M-circle dot, and they are subcritical. Core A, which is associated with a hypercompact HII region and could be the driving source of the molecular outflow observed in the region, is the most chemically rich source in G35.03+0.35 with strong emission of typical hot core tracers such as CH3CN. Tracers of high density and excitation show a clear velocity gradient along the major axis of the core, which is consistent with a disk rotating about the axis of the associated outflow. The PV plots along the SE-NW direction of the velocity gradient show clear signatures of Keplerian rotation, although infall could also be present, and they are consistent with the pattern of an edge-on Keplerian disk rotating about a star with

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1247374881
Document Type :
Electronic Resource