THE KINEMATIC and CHEMICAL PROPERTIES of A POTENTIAL CORE-FORMING CLUMP: PERSEUS B1-E

S. I. Sadavoy, Y. Shirley, J. Di Francesco, Th Henning, M. J. Currie, Ph André, S. Pezzuto

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

We present 13CO and C18O (1-0), (2-1), and (3-2) maps toward the core-forming Perseus B1-E clump using observations from the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope, the Submillimeter Telescope of the Arizona Radio Observatory, and the IRAM 30 m telescope. We find that the 13CO and C18O line emission both have very complex velocity structures, indicative of multiple velocity components within the ambient gas. The (10) transitions reveal a radial velocity gradient across B1-E of ∼1 km s-1 pc-1 that increases from northwest to southeast, whereas he majority of the Perseus cloud has a radial velocity gradient increasing from southwest to northeast. In contrast, we see no evidence of a velocity gradient associated with the denser Herschel-identified substructures in B1-E. Additionally, the denser substructures have much lower systemic motions than the ambient clump material, which indicates that they are likely decoupled from the large-scale gas. Nevertheless, these substructures themselves have broad line widths (∼0.4 km s-1) similar to that of the C18O gas in the clump, which suggests they inherited their kinematic properties from the larger-scale, moderately dense gas. Finally, we find evidence of C18 O depletion only toward one substructure, B1-E2, which is also the only object with narrow (transonic) line widths. We suggest that as prestellar cores form, their chemical and kinematic properties are linked in evolution, such that these objects must first dissipate their turbulence before they deplete in CO.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number38
JournalAstrophysical Journal
Volume806
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 10 2015

Keywords

  • ISM: clouds
  • ISM: kinematics and dynamics
  • ISM: structure
  • astrochemistry
  • dust, extinction
  • stars: formation

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Astronomy and Astrophysics
  • Space and Planetary Science

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