The ALMA Survey of 70 μm Dark High-mass Clumps in Early Stages (ASHES). XI. Statistical Study of Early Fragmentation
Journal article, 2024

Fragmentation during the early stages of high-mass star formation is crucial for understanding the formation of high-mass clusters. We investigated fragmentation within 39 high-mass star-forming clumps as part of the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array Survey of 70 μm Dark High-mass Clumps in Early Stages (ASHES) survey. Considering projection effects, we have estimated core separations for 839 cores identified from the continuum emission and found mean values between 0.08 and 0.32 pc within each clump. We find compatibility of the observed core separations and masses with the thermal Jeans length and mass, respectively. We also present subclump structures revealed by the 7 m array continuum emission. Comparison of the Jeans parameters using clump and subclump densities with the separation and masses of gravitationally bound cores suggests that they can be explained by clump fragmentation, implying the simultaneous formation of subclumps and cores within rather than a step-by-step hierarchical fragmentation. The number of cores in each clump positively correlates with the clump surface density and the number expected from the thermal Jeans fragmentation. We also find that the higher the fraction of protostellar cores, the larger the dynamic range of the core mass, implying that the cores are growing in mass as the clump evolves. The ASHES sample exhibits various fragmentation patterns: aligned, scattered, clustered, and subclustered. Using the Q -parameter, which can help distinguish between centrally condensed and subclustered spatial core distributions, we finally find that in the early evolutionary stages of high-mass star formation, cores tend to follow a subclustered distribution.

Author

Kaho Morii

National Astronomical Observatory of Japan

University of Tokyo

Patricio Sanhueza

The Graduate University for Advanced Studies (SOKENDAI)

National Astronomical Observatory of Japan

Q. Zhang

Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics

Fumitaka Nakamura

University of Tokyo

The Graduate University for Advanced Studies (SOKENDAI)

National Astronomical Observatory of Japan

Shanghuo Li

Max Planck Society

Giovanni Sabatini

Arcetri Astrophysical Observatory

Fernando A. Olguin

National Tsing Hua University

H. Beuther

Max Planck Society

Daniel Tafoya

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Onsala Space Observatory

Natsuko Izumi

Academia Sinica

Ken’ichi Tatematsu

The Graduate University for Advanced Studies (SOKENDAI)

National Astronomical Observatory of Japan

T. Sakai

University of Electro-Communications

Astrophysical Journal

0004-637X (ISSN) 1538-4357 (eISSN)

Vol. 966 2 171

Subject Categories

Meteorology and Atmospheric Sciences

Astronomy, Astrophysics and Cosmology

Probability Theory and Statistics

Infrastructure

Onsala Space Observatory

DOI

10.3847/1538-4357/ad32d0

More information

Latest update

5/21/2024