http://arxiv.org/abs/2004.13946
The initial stage of star formation is very difficult to study because of its high density and low temperature. Under such conditions, many molecules become depleted from the gas phase by freezing out onto dust grains. However, the deuterated species could remain gaseous and are thus ideal tracers. We investigate the gas dynamics and NH$2$D chemistry in eight massive pre/protocluster clumps. We present NH$_2$D 1${11}$-1${01}$ (at 85.926 GHz), NH$_3$ (1, 1) and (2, 2) observations in the eight clumps using the PdBI and the VLA, respectively. We find that the distribution between deuterium fractionation and kinetic temperature shows a number density peak at around $T{\rm kin}=16.1$ K, and the NH$2$D cores are mainly located at a temperature range of 13.0 to 22.0 K. We detect seven extremely high deuterium fractionation of $1.0 \leqslant D{\rm frac} \leqslant 1.41$. We find that the NH$2$D emission does not appear to coincide exactly with either dust continuum or NH$_3$ peak positions, but often surrounds the star-formation active regions. This suggests that the NH${2}$D has been destroyed by the central young stellar object (YSO) due to its heating. The detected NH$2$D lines are very narrow with a median width of $\rm 0.98\pm0.02 km/s$. The extracted NH$_2$D cores are gravitationally bound ($\alpha{\rm vir} < 1$), are likely prestellar or starless, and can potentially form intermediate-mass or high-mass stars. Using NH$_3$ (1, 1) as a dynamical tracer, we find very complicated dynamical movement, which can be explained by a combined process with outflow, rotation, convergent flow, collision, large velocity gradient, and rotating toroids. We find that high deuterium fractionation strongly depends on the temperature condition, and NH$_2$D is a poor evolutionary indicator of high-mass star formation in evolved stages, but a useful tracer in the starless and prestellar cores.
C. Zhang, G. Li, T. Pillai, et. al.
Thu, 30 Apr 20
35/71
Comments: 27 pages, 25 figures, 6 tables, accepted for publication in A&A
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