Filamentary Flows and Clump-fed High-mass Star Formation in G22 [GA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1711.09547


G22 is a hub-filament system composed of four supercritical filaments. Velocity gradients are detected along three filaments. A total mass infall rate of 440 $M_\odot$~Myr$^{-1}$ would double the hub mass in about six free-fall times. The most massive clump C1 would be in global collapse with an infall velocity of 0.31 km s$^{-1}$ and a mass infall rate of $ 7.2\times10^{-4} $ $M_\odot$ yr$^{-1}$, which is supported by the prevalent HCO$^+$ (3-2) and $^{13}$CO (3-2) blue profiles. A hot molecular core (SMA1) was revealed in C1. At the SMA1 center, there is a massive protostar (MIR1) driving multipolar outflows which are associated with clusters of class I methanol masers. MIR1 may be still growing with an accretion rate of $7\times10^{-5}$ $M_\odot$ yr$^{-1}$. Filamentary flows, clump-scale collapse, core-scale accretion coexist in G22, suggesting that high-mass starless cores may not be prerequisite to form high-mass stars. In the high-mass star formation process, the central protostar, the core, and the clump can grow in mass simultaneously.

Read this paper on arXiv…

J. Yuan, J. Li and Y. Wu
Tue, 28 Nov 17
67/82

Comments: 2 pages, 2 figures, to appear in proceedings of IAU Symposium 336 – Astrophysical Masers: Unlocking the Mysteries of the Universe