4.7 Article

ATLASGAL - evolutionary trends in high-mass star formation

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 510, Issue 3, Pages 3389-3407

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stab3511

Keywords

stars: early-type; stars: formation; ISM: evolution; Galaxy: kinematics and dynamics; submillimetre: ISM

Funding

  1. INAF through the project INAF-PRIN 2019 ONSET [1.05.01.85.05]
  2. German Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG [SFB956A]

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ATLASGAL is a dust survey that identifies dense molecular clumps in the inner Galactic plane. The physical properties and evolutionary sequence of these clumps are studied using follow-up observations and complementary surveys. The analysis of the data shows that the star formation process is continuous and the different observational stages do not represent fundamentally different stages or changes in the physical mechanisms involved. Comparing the results with other star formation tracers confirms the reliability of the classification and reveals the early indication of star formation through molecular outflows.
ATLASGAL is an 870-mu m dust survey of 420 deg(2) the inner Galactic plane and has been used to identify similar to 10 000 dense molecular clumps. Dedicated follow-up observations and complementary surveys are used to characterize the physical properties of these clumps, map their Galactic distribution, and investigate the evolutionary sequence for high-mass star formation. The analysis of the ATLASGAL data is ongoing: We present an up-to-date version of the catalogue. We have classified 5007 clumps into four evolutionary stages (quiescent, protostellar, young stellar objects and H II regions) and find similar numbers of clumps in each stage, suggesting a similar lifetime. The luminosity-to-mass (L-bol/M-fwhm) ratio curve shows a smooth distribution with no significant kinks or discontinuities when compared to the mean values for evolutionary stages indicating that the star formation process is continuous and that the observational stages do not represent fundamentally different stages or changes in the physical mechanisms involved. We compare the evolutionary sample with other star formation tracers (methanol and water masers, extended green objects and molecular outflows) and find that the association rates with these increases as a function of evolutionary stage, confirming that our classification is reliable. This also reveals a high association rate between quiescent sources and molecular outflows, revealing that outflows are the earliest indication that star formation has begun and that star formation is already ongoing in many of the clumps that are dark even at 70 mu m.

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