Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2248/8317
Title: TRAO Survey of Nearby Filamentary Molecular Clouds, the Universal Nursery of Stars (TRAO-FUNS). III. Filaments and Dense Cores in the NGC 2068 and NGC 2071 Regions of Orion B
Authors: Yoo, Hyunju
Lee, Chang Won
Chung, Eun Jung
Kim, Shinyoung
Tafalla, Mario
Caselli, Paola
Myers, Philip C
Kim, Kyoung Hee
Liu, Tie
Kwon, Woojin
Archana Soam
Kim, Jongsoo
Keywords: Interstellar medium
Interstellar filaments
Molecular clouds
Star formation
Radio astronomy
Issue Date: 10-Nov-2023
Publisher: American Astronomical Society
Citation: The Astrophysical Journal, Vol. 957, No. 2, 94
Abstract: We present the results of molecular line observations performed toward the NGC 2068 and NGC 2071 regions of the Orion B cloud as the TRAO-FUNS project to study the roles of the filamentary structure in the formation of dense cores and stars in the clouds. Gaussian decomposition for the C18O spectra with multiple velocity components and the application of a friends-of-friends algorithm for the decomposed components allowed us to identify a few tens of velocity-coherent filaments. We also identified 48 dense cores from the observations of N2H+ using a core finding tool, FellWalker. We performed a virial analysis for these filaments and dense cores, finding that the filaments with N2H+ dense core are thermally supercritical, and the filaments with a larger ratio between the line mass and the thermal critical line mass tend to have more dense cores. We investigated the contribution of the nonthermal motions in dense cores and filaments, showing the dense cores are mostly in transonic/subsonic motions while their natal filaments are mostly in supersonic motions. This may indicate that gas turbulent motions in the filaments have been dissipated at the core scale to form the dense cores there. The filaments with (dynamically evolved) dense cores in infalling motions or with NH2D bright (or chemically evolved) dense cores are all found to be gravitationally critical. Therefore, the criticality of the filament is thought to provide a key condition for its fragmentation, the formation of dense cores, and their kinematical and chemical evolution
Description: Open Access
Original content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. Any further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the title of the work, journal citation, and DOI.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2248/8317
ISSN: 1538-4357
Appears in Collections:IIAP Publications

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