Fragmentation in the Serpens/Aquila Star-forming Region
Samuel Fielder, Helen Kirk, Michael Dunham, Stella Offner
TLDR
ALMA observations in Serpens/Aquila reveal starless and fragmented protostellar cores, supporting turbulent core collapse models of star formation.
Key contributions
- Identified 66 ALMA continuum sources in Aquila, including two completely starless dense cores.
- Found nine starless substructures within fragmented protostellar cores, indicating complex fragmentation.
- Synthetic observations of turbulent core collapse models predict starless core detections consistent with ALMA data.
- Mass distribution analysis links increased small-scale multiplicity to higher fragmentation in larger parent structures.
Why it matters
This paper provides crucial observational evidence for the turbulent core collapse model, linking large-scale turbulence to the fragmentation of dense cores. It significantly advances our understanding of how new star systems form.
Original Abstract
We present a population study of Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) Cycle 6 observations of the 100 most gravitationally unstable dense cores in Aquila using a simple mass versus size analysis. We identify 66 continuum sources from ALMA 12m observations at 106GHz and through comparisons with known protostellar catalogs; two of these detected dense cores appear to be completely starless, without any accompanying/nearby protostar detections. Additionally, we find nine other starless ALMA 12m detections within protostellar cores that have fragmented into a mixture of starless and protostellar substructures. We test the turbulent core collapse model by conducting synthetic observations of turbulent magnetohydrodynamical simulations of collapsing starless cores in order to predict how many starless cores should be detected given their central density and density profile. The simulations predict at least one (1.19) detection, consistent with our two detections of ALMA 12m emission within completely starless cores. We also use a combination of ALMA Compact Array Cycle 4 observations and the Herschel Gould Belt Survey data to analyze how mass is distributed on three distinct spatial scales, in order to understand how turbulence shapes the evolution of substructure development as dense cores collapse to form new star systems. We find an increase in multiplicity at the smallest scales when the parent larger-scale structure also has a higher degree of fragmentation.
📬 Weekly AI Paper Digest
Get the top 10 AI/ML arXiv papers from the week — summarized, scored, and delivered to your inbox every Monday.