Unveiling the Early-Stage Anatomy of a Protocluster Hub with ALMA

Abstract

High-mass stars shape the interstellar medium in galaxies, and yet, largely because the initial conditions are poorly constrained, we do not know how they form. One possibility is that high-mass stars and star clusters form at the junction of filamentary networks, referred to as 'hubs'. In this letter we present the complex anatomy of a protocluster hub within an Infrared Dark Cloud (IRDC), G035.39-00.33, believed to be in an early phase of its evolution. We use high-angular resolution (\θ maj, θ min\=\1.4 arcsec, 0.8 arcsec\\0.02 pc, 0.01 pc\) and high-sensitivity (0.2mJy beam-1; 0.2M) 1.07 mm dust continuum observations from the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA) to identify a network of narrow, 0.028\,\,0.005pc wide, filamentary structures. These are a factor of 3 narrower than the proposed 'quasi-universal' 0.1pc width of interstellar filaments. Additionally, 28 compact objects are reported, spanning a mass range 0.3 M<M c<10.4 M. This indicates that at least some low-mass objects are forming coevally with more massive counterparts. Comparing to the popular 'bead-on-a-string' analogy, the protocluster hub is poorly represented by a monolithic clump embedded within a single filament. Instead, it comprises multiple intra-hub filaments, each of which retains its integrity as an independent structure and possesses its own embedded core population.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…