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ALMA observations of NGC 6334S. II. Subsonic and transonic narrow filaments in a high-mass star formation cloud

Authors :
National Natural Science Foundation of China
National Key Research and Development Program (China)
National Research Foundation of Korea
German Research Foundation
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
European Research Council
European Commission
Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España)
Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España)
Li, Shanghuo
Sanhueza, Patricio
Lee, Chang Won
Zhang, Qizhou
Beuther, Henrik
Palau, Aina
Liu, Hong-li
Smith, Howard A.
Liu, Hauyu Baobab
Jiménez-Serra, Izaskun
Kim, Kee-Tae
Feng, Siyi
Liu, Tie
Wang, Junzhi
Li, Di
Qiu, Keping
Lu, Xing
Girart, Josep Miquel
Wang, Ke
Li, Fei
Li, Juan
Cao, Yue
Kim, Shinyoung
Strom, Shaye
National Natural Science Foundation of China
National Key Research and Development Program (China)
National Research Foundation of Korea
German Research Foundation
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
European Research Council
European Commission
Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España)
Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España)
Li, Shanghuo
Sanhueza, Patricio
Lee, Chang Won
Zhang, Qizhou
Beuther, Henrik
Palau, Aina
Liu, Hong-li
Smith, Howard A.
Liu, Hauyu Baobab
Jiménez-Serra, Izaskun
Kim, Kee-Tae
Feng, Siyi
Liu, Tie
Wang, Junzhi
Li, Di
Qiu, Keping
Lu, Xing
Girart, Josep Miquel
Wang, Ke
Li, Fei
Li, Juan
Cao, Yue
Kim, Shinyoung
Strom, Shaye
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

We present a study of narrow filaments toward a massive infrared dark cloud, NGC 6334S, using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array. Thirteen gas filaments are identified using the H13CO+ line, while a single continuum filament is revealed by the continuum emission. The filaments present a compact radial distribution with a median filament width of ∼0.04 pc, narrower than the previously proposed “quasi-universal” 0.1 pc filament width. The higher spatial resolution observations and higher density gas tracer tend to identify even narrower and lower mass filaments. The filament widths are roughly twice the size of embedded cores. The gas filaments are largely supported by thermal motions. The nonthermal motions are predominantly subsonic and transonic in both identified gas filaments and embedded cores, which may imply that stars are likely born in environments of low turbulence. A fraction of embedded objects show a narrower velocity dispersion compared with their corresponding natal filaments, which may indicate that turbulent dissipation is taking place in these embedded cores. The physical properties (mass, mass per unit length, gas kinematics, and width) of gas filaments are analogous to those of narrow filaments found in low- to high-mass star-forming regions. The more evolved sources are found to be farther away from the filaments, a situation that may have resulted from the relative motions between the young stellar objects and their natal filaments.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1373152704
Document Type :
Electronic Resource