Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2248/8006
Title: ATOMS: ALMA Three-millimeter Observations of Massive Star-forming regions – IX. A pilot study towards IRDC G034.43+00.24 on multi-scale structures and gas kinematics
Authors: Liu, Hong-Li
Tej, Anandmayee
Liu, Tie
Goldsmith, Paul F
Stutz, Amelia
Juvela, Mika
Qin, Sheng-Li
Xu, Feng-Wei
Bronfman, Leonardo
Evans, Neal J
Saha, Anindya
Issac, Namitha
Tatematsu, Ken’ichi
Wang, Ke
Li, Shanghuo
Zhang, Siju
Baug, Tapas
Dewangan, Lokesh
Wu, Yue-Fang
Zhang, Yong
Lee, Chang Won
Liu, Xun-Chuan
Zhou, Jianwen
Archana Soam
Keywords: Stars: formation
ISM: clouds
ISM: individual objects: G034.43+00.24
ISM: kinematics and dynamics
Issue Date: Apr-2022
Publisher: Oxford University Press on behalf of Royal Astronomical Society
Citation: Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Vol. 511, No. 3, pp. 4480–4489
Abstract: We present a comprehensive study of the gas kinematics associated with density structures at different spatial scales in the filamentary infrared dark cloud, G034.43+00.24 (G34). This study makes use of the H13CO+ (1–0) molecular line data from the ALMA Three-millimeter Observations of Massive Star-forming regions (ATOMS) survey, which has spatial and velocity resolution of ∼0.04 pc and 0.2 km s−1, respectively. Several tens of dendrogram structures have been extracted in the positionposition-velocity space of H13CO+, which include 21 small-scale leaves and 20 larger-scale branches. Overall, their gas motions are supersonic but they exhibit the interesting behaviour where leaves tend to be less dynamically supersonic than the branches. For the larger scale, branch structures, the observed velocity–size relation (i.e. velocity variation/dispersion versus size) are seen to follow the Larson scaling exponent while the smaller-scale, leaf structures show a systematic deviation and display a steeper slope. We argue that the origin of the observed kinematics of the branch structures is likely to be a combination of turbulence and gravity-driven ordered gas flows. In comparison, gravity-driven chaotic gas motion is likely at the level of small-scale leaf structures. The results presented in our previous paper and this current follow-up study suggest that the main driving mechanism for mass accretion/inflow observed in G34 varies at different spatial scales. We therefore conclude that a scale-dependent combined effect of turbulence and gravity is essential to explain the star-formation processes in G34.
Description: Restricted Access
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2248/8006
ISSN: 1365-2966
Appears in Collections:IIAP Publications



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