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arxiv: 1304.4950 · v2 · pith:3Z3KFTTMnew · submitted 2013-04-17 · 🌌 astro-ph.GA · astro-ph.SR

Line Profiles of Cores within Clusters: II Signatures of Dynamical Collapse during High Mass Star Formation

classification 🌌 astro-ph.GA astro-ph.SR
keywords linesopticallyprofileslineregionscollapsecollapsingmsfrs
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Observations of atomic or molecular lines can provide important information about the physical state of star forming regions. In order to investigate the line profiles from dynamical collapsing massive star forming regions (MSFRs), we model the emission from hydrodynamic simulations of a collapsing cloud in the absence of outflows. By performing radiative transfer calculations, we compute the optically thick HCO+ and optically thin N2H+ line profiles from two collapsing regions at different epochs. Due to large-scale collapse, the MSFRs have large velocity gradients, reaching up to 20 km/s/pc across the central core. The optically thin lines typically contain multiple velocity components resulting from the superposition of numerous density peaks along the line-of-sight. The optically thick lines are only marginally shifted to the blue side of the optically thin line profiles, and frequently do not have a central depression in their profiles due to self-absorption. As the regions evolve the lines become brighter and the optically thick lines become broader. The lower order HCO+ (1-0) transitions are better indicators of collapse than the higher order (4-3) transitions. We also investigate how the beam sizes affect profile shapes. Smaller beams lead to brighter and narrower lines that are more skewed to the blue in HCO+ relative to the true core velocity, but show multiple components in N2H+. High resolution observations (e.g. with ALMA) can test these predictions and provide insights into the nature of MSFRs.

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Reviewed papers in the Pith corpus that reference this work. Sorted by Pith novelty score.

  1. Global and Local Infall in the ASHES Sample (GLASHES). II. Asymmetric Line Profiles around Dense Cores in 70 $\mu$m Dark Massive Clumps

    astro-ph.GA 2026-05 conditional novelty 6.0

    Blue-asymmetric spectral lines appear in 50-60% of dense cores within massive dark clumps, showing that gravitational collapse operates at core scales from prestellar stages onward and supports hierarchical star formation.