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The ALMA Survey of Star Formation and Evolution in Massive Protoclusters with Blue Profiles (ASSEMBLE): Core Growth, Cluster Contraction, and Primordial Mass Segregation

Authors :
Xu, Fengwei
Wang, Ke
Liu, Tie
Tang, Mengyao
Evans II, Neal J.
Palau, Aina
Morii, Kaho
He, Jinhua
Sanhueza, Patricio
Liu, Hong-Li
Stutz, Amelia
Zhang, Qizhou
Chen, Xi
Li, Pak Shing
Gómez, Gilberto C.
Vázquez-Semadeni, Enrique
Li, Shanghuo
Mai, Xiaofeng
Lu, Xing
Liu, Meizhu
Chen, Li
Li, Chuanshou
Shi, Hongqiong
Ren, Zhiyuan
Li, Di
Garay, Guido
Bronfman, Leonardo
Dewangan, Lokesh
Juvela, Mika
Lee, Chang Won
Zhang, S.
Yue, Nannan
Wang, Chao
Ge, Yifei
Jiao, Wenyu
Luo, Qiuyi
Zhou, J. -W.
Tatematsu, Ken'ichi
Chibueze, James O.
Su, Keyun
Sun, Shenglan
Ristorcelli, I.
Toth, L. Viktor
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The ALMA Survey of Star Formation and Evolution in Massive Protoclusters with Blue Profiles (ASSEMBLE) aims to investigate the process of mass assembly and its connection to high-mass star formation theories in protoclusters in a dynamic view. We observed 11 massive (Mclump>1000 Msun), luminous (Lbol>10,000 Lsun), and blue-profile (infall signature) clumps by ALMA with resolution of 2200-5500 au at 350 GHz (870 um) in continuum and line emission. 248 dense cores were identified, including 106 cores showing protostellar signatures and 142 prestellar core candidates. Compared to early-stage infrared dark clouds (IRDCs) by ASHES, the core mass and surface density within the ASSEMBLE clumps exhibited significant increment, suggesting concurrent core accretion during the evolution of the clumps. The maximum mass of prestellar cores was found to be 2 times larger than that in IRDCs, indicating evolved protoclusters have the potential to harbor massive prestellar cores. The mass relation between clumps and their most massive core (MMCs) is observed in ASSEMBLE but not in IRDCs, which is suggested to be regulated by multiscale mass accretion. The mass correlation between the core clusters and their MMCs has a steeper slope compared to that observed in stellar clusters, which can be due to fragmentation of the MMC and stellar multiplicity. We observe a decrease in core separation and an increase in central concentration as protoclusters evolve. We confirm primordial mass segregation in the ASSEMBLE protoclusters, possibly resulting from gravitational concentration and/or gas accretion.<br />Comment: 37 pages, 13 figures, 5 tables; accepted for publication in ApJS

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2309.14684
Document Type :
Working Paper