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Published on 29 June 2017
Vol. 603
In section 6. Interstellar and circumstellar matter
Fragmentation and disk formation in high-mass star formation:
The ALMA view of G351.77-0.54 at 0.06'' resolution
by H. Beuther, A. J. Walsh, K. G. Johnston, et al. A&A 603, A10
Understanding the fragmentation of high-mass gas clumps and the
subsequent formation and evolution of accretion disks around young
high-mass protostars remains an unsolved question in high-mass star
formation research. In this paper, the authors report ALMA observationsof the massive hot core region G351.77-0.54 with baselines up to 1.5 km,
leading to at an unprecedented spatial resolution of 0.06 arcsec (130 AU) at a source distance of 2.2 kpc. Within the inner few 1000 AU, G351.77 fragments into at least four cores (see figure). The kinematics of the
central structure (#1) reveal contributions from a rotating disk, an
infalling envelope and potentially also an outflow, whereas the spectral
profile toward source #2 can be attributed to infall, with a rate of upto 10ˆ-4 - 10ˆ-3 solar mass per year. A stability analysis of the
rotating central structure suggests that it is axisymmetrically stable.However, asymmetric instabilities such as spiral arms may still occur on
smaller, so far unresolved, spatial scales.