Linear filament and nested cluster evolution tomography (LANCET) I. Capture the evolution of dense gas in 14-parsec filament G316.8
Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift, 2026

A dynamic view of mass assembly is essential for understanding the formation of massive stars and clusters. However, interpreting evolutionary diagnostics from Galactic-wide surveys requires careful consideration of distance and environmental variations. The G316.8 filament provides an excellent controlled case: a 14-parsec, nearly linear structure comprising three contiguous subregions with comparable molecular gas reservoirs (each similar to 10 000 M-circle dot), yet spanning a clear evolutionary sequence from a northern infrared dark cloud (young) through a central massive young stellar object (intermediate), to a southern HII region (evolved). The Linear filament and nested cluster evolution tomography (LANCET) project mapped the entire G316.8 filament with the Atacama Compact Array (ACA) at 1.3 mm, achieving 6 '' (0.08 pc) resolution over 26.7 arcmin(2) (17.1 pc(2)). By combining ACA 7 m data with Herschel and APEX/ArTeMiS observations, we produced high-resolution temperature and column-density maps. We quantified subregional differences using (i) dense-fragment statistics, (ii) column-density probability distribution functions (N-PDFs), and (iii) the scale-dependent structural diagnostic, the Delta-variance. From young to intermediate to evolved, the maximum fragment mass increases from 8 to 160 to 490 M-circle dot, while the dense-gas mass fraction (>0.5 g cm(-2)) rises from 0.4 to 2.3 to 9.6%. Along this sequence, the N-PDF develops a slightly flatter primary power-law tail and an additional, steeper secondary tail; the Delta-variance slope becomes progressively shallower. Across G316.8, the subregional differences consistently indicate a coherent evolutionary trend of massive star formation, in which gas is continuously assembled into sub-parsec dense structures. The forthcoming 12 m array observations are about to extend this dynamic picture by resolving dense core formation and probing gas kinematics and magnetic fields.

stars: formation

ISM: clouds

ISM: structure

stars: massive

Författare

Fengwei Xu

Beijing University of Technology

Max-Planck-Gesellschaft

Ke Wang

Beijing University of Technology

Nicola Schneider

TH Köln - University of Applied Sciences

Roberto Galván-Madrid

Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México

Floris F. S. van der Tak

Rijksuniversiteit Groningen

Adam Ginsburg

University of Florida

Jonathan Tan

Chalmers, Fysik, Subatomär, högenergi- och plasmafysik

Hauyu Baobab Liu

National Taiwan Normal University

National Sun Yat-Sen University

Qizhou Zhang

Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics

Wenyu Jiao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

Guido Garay

Chinese Academy of Sciences

Universidad de Chile (UCH)

Sihan Jiao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

Max-Planck-Gesellschaft

Keyun Su

Beijing University of Technology

Beth M. Jones

TH Köln - University of Applied Sciences

Lei Zhu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

Astronomy and Astrophysics

0004-6361 (ISSN) 1432-0746 (eISSN)

Vol. 708 A251

Ämneskategorier (SSIF 2025)

Astronomi, astrofysik och kosmologi

DOI

10.1051/0004-6361/202557480

Mer information

Senast uppdaterat

2026-06-01