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The ALMA Survey of 70 $\mu$m dark High-mass clumps in Early Stages (ASHES). I. Pilot Survey: Clump Fragmentation

Authors :
Sanhueza, Patricio
Contreras, Yanett
Wu, Benjamin
Jackson, James M.
Guzmán, Andrés E.
Zhang, Qizhou
Li, Shanghuo
Lu, Xing
Silva, Andrea
Izumi, Natsuko
Liu, Tie
Miura, Rie E.
Tatematsu, Ken'ichi
Sakai, Takeshi
Beuther, Henrik
Garay, Guido
Ohashi, Satoshi
Saito, Masao
Nakamura, Fumitaka
Saigo, Kazuya
Veena, V. S.
Nguyen-Luong, Quang
Tafoya, Daniel
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

(Abridged) ASHES has been designed to systematically characterize the earliest stages and to constrain theories of high-mass star formation. A total of 12 massive (>500 $M_{\odot}$), cold (<15 K), 3.6-70 $\mu$m dark prestellar clump candidates, embedded in IRDCs, were carefully selected in the pilot survey to be observed with ALMA. We mosaiced each clump (~1 arcmin^2) in dust and line emission with the 12m/7m/TP arrays at 224 GHz, resulting in ~1.2" resolution (~4800 AU). As the first paper of the series, we concentrate on the dust emission to reveal the clump fragmentation. We detect 294 cores, from which 84 (29%) are categorized as protostellar based on outflow activity or 'warm core' line emission. The remaining 210 (71%) are considered prestellar core candidates. The number of detected cores is independent of the mass sensitivity range of the observations. On average, more massive clumps tend to form more cores. We find a large population of low-mass (<1 M) cores and no high-mass (>30 $M_{\odot}$) prestellar cores. The most massive prestellar core has a mass of 11 $M_{\odot}$. From the prestellar CMF, we derive a power law index of 1.17+-0.1, slightly shallower than Salpeter (1.35). We use the MST technique to characterize the separation between cores and their spatial distribution, and derive mass segregation ratios. While there is a range of core masses and separations detected in the sample, the mean separation and mass of cores are well explained by thermal fragmentation and are inconsistent with turbulent Jeans fragmentation. The core spatial distribution is well described by hierarchical subclustering rather than centrally peaked clustering. There is no conclusive evidence of mass segregation. We test several theoretical conditions, and conclude that overall, competitive accretion and global hierarchical collapse scenarios are favored over the turbulent core accretion scenario.<br />Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ (September 17, 2019). 37 pages, 19 figures, and 7 tables

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1909.07985
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ab45e9