An ALMA Glimpse of Dense Molecular Filaments Associated with High-mass Protostellar Systems in the Large Magellanic Cloud
Abstract
Recent millimeter/sub-millimeter facilities have revealed the physical properties of filamentary molecular clouds in relation to high-mass star formation. A uniform survey of the nearest, face-on star-forming galaxy, the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), complements the Galactic knowledge. We present ALMA survey data with a spatial resolution of 0.1 pc in the 0.87 mm continuum and HCO+(4-3) emission toward 30 protostellar objects with luminosities of 104-105.5 L in the LMC. The spatial distributions of the HCO+(4-3) line and thermal dust emission are well correlated, indicating that the line effectively traces dense, filamentary gas with an H2 volume density of 105 cm-3 and a line mass of 103-104 M pc-1. Furthermore, we obtain an increase in the velocity linewidths of filamentary clouds, which follows a power-law dependence on their H2 column densities with an exponent of 0.5. This trend is consistent with observations toward filamentary clouds in nearby star-forming regions withiin 1 kpc from us and suggests enhanced internal turbulence within the filaments owing to surrounding gas accretion. Among the 30 sources, we find that 14 are associated with hub-filamentary structures, and these complex structures predominantly appear in protostellar luminosities exceeding 5 ×104 L. The hub-filament systems tend to appear in the latest stages of their natal cloud evolution, often linked to prominent H\; ii regions and numerous stellar clusters. Our preliminary statistics suggest that the massive filaments accompanied by hub-type complex features may be a necessary intermediate product in forming extremely luminous high-mass stellar systems capable of ultimately dispersing the parent cloud.
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