Star formation in massive clumps in Milky Way Virtual Observatory Resource

Authors
  1. Heyer M.
  2. Gutermuth R.
  3. Urquhart J.S.
  4. Csengeri T.
  5. Wienen M.
  6. Leurini S.,Menten K.
  7. Wyrowski F.
  8. Published by
    CDS
Abstract

Newborn stars form within the localized, high density regions of molecular clouds. The sequence and rate at which stars form in dense clumps and the dependence on local and global environments are key factors in developing descriptions of stellar production in galaxies. We seek to observationally constrain the rate and latency of star formation in dense massive clumps that are distributed throughout the Galaxy and to compare these results to proposed prescriptions for stellar production. A sample of 24 micron based Class I protostars are linked to dust clumps that are embedded within molecular clouds selected from the APEX Telescope Large Area Survey of the Galaxy. We determine the fraction of star-forming clumps that imposes a constraint on the latency of star formation in units of a clump's lifetime. Protostellar masses are estimated from models of circumstellar environments of young stellar objects from which star formation rates are derived. Physical properties of the clumps are calculated from 870 micron dust continuum emission and NH_3_ line emission. Linear correlations are identified between the star formation rate surface density, Sigma_SFR and the quantities Sigma_H2/tau_ff and Sigma_H2/tau_cross, suggesting that star formation is regulated at the local scales of molecular clouds. The measured fraction of star forming clumps is 23%. Accounting for star formation within clumps that are excluded from our sample due to 24 micron saturation, this fraction can be as high as 31%, which is similar to previous results. Dense, massive clumps form primarily low mass (<1-2M_{sun}_) stars with emergent 24 micron fluxes below our sensitivity limit or are incapable of forming any stars for the initial 70% of their lifetimes. The low fraction of star forming clumps in the Galactic center relative to those located in the disk of the Milky Way is verified.

Keywords
  1. milky-way-galaxy
  2. young-stellar-objects
  3. stellar-masses
  4. interstellar-medium
Bibliographic source Bibcode
2016A&A...588A..29H
See also HTML
https://cdsarc.cds.unistra.fr/viz-bin/cat/J/A+A/588/A29
IVOA Identifier IVOID
ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/588/A29
Document Object Identifer DOI
doi:10.26093/cds/vizier.35880029

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History

2016-03-14T07:59:57Z
Resource record created
2016-03-14T07:59:57Z
Created
2018-05-02T08:42:46Z
Updated

Contact

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CDS support team
Postal Address
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