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research
ATLASGAL - towards a complete sample of massive star forming clumps
Authors
L Bronfman
T Csengeri
+13 more
MG Hoare
C Koenig
SL Lumsden
KM Menten
TJT Moore
JC Mottram
S Pfalzner
F Schuller
MA Thompson
JS Urquhart
CM Walmsley
M Wienen
F Wyrowski
Publication date
Publisher
'Oxford University Press (OUP)'
Abstract
By matching infrared-selected, massive young stellar objects (MYSOs) and compact HII regions in the Red MSX Source survey to massive clumps found in the submillimetre ATLASGAL (APEX Telescope Large Area Survey of the Galaxy) survey, we have identified ~1000 embedded young massive stars between 280 {ring operator} < l < 350 {ring operator} and 10 {ring operator} < l < 60 {ring operator} with | b | < 1 {ring operator} . 5. Combined with an existing sample of radio-selected methanol masers and compact HII regions, the result is a catalogue of ~1700 massive stars embedded within ~1300 clumps located across the inner Galaxy, containing three observationally distinct subsamples, methanol-maser, MYSO and HII-region associations, covering the most important tracers of massive star formation, thought to represent key stages of evolution. We find that massive star formation is strongly correlated with the regions of highest column density in spherical, centrally condensed clumps. We find no significant differences between the three samples in clump structure or the relative location of the embedded stars, which suggests that the structure of a clump is set before the onset of star formation, and changes little as the embedded object evolves towards the main sequence. There is a strong linear correlation between clump mass and bolometric luminosity, with the most massive stars forming in the most massive clumps. We find that the MYSO and HII-region subsamples are likely to cover a similar range of evolutionary stages and that the majority are near the end of their main accretion phase. We find few infrared-bright MYSOs associated with the most massive clumps, probably due to very short pre-main-sequence lifetimes in the most luminous sources. © 2014 The Authors. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society
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Last time updated on 08/03/2018