Follow-up Observations Toward Planck Cold Clumps with Ground-Based Radio Telescopes
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2015-09Metadata
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Liu, Tie
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Follow-up Observations Toward Planck Cold Clumps with Ground-Based Radio Telescopes
Author
- Liu, Tie;
- Wu, Yuefang;
- Mardones Pérez, Diego;
- Kim, Kee-Tae;
- Menten, Karl;
- Tatematsu, Ken;
- Cunningham, Maria;
- Juvela, Mika;
- Zhang, Qizhou;
- Goldsmith, Paul;
- Liu, Sheng-Yuan;
- Zhang, Hua-Wei;
- Meng, Fanyi;
- Li, Di;
- Lo, Nadia;
- Guan, Xin;
- Yuan, Jinghua;
- Belloche, Arnaud;
- Henkel, Christian;
- Wyrowski, Friedrich;
- Garay Brignardello, Guido;
- Ristorcelli, Isabelle;
- Lee, Jeong-Eun;
- Wang, Ke;
- Bronfman Aguiló, Leonardo;
- Toth, L.;
- Schnee, Scott;
- Qin, Shengli;
- Akhter, Shaila;
Abstract
The physical and chemical properties of prestellar cores, especially massive ones, are still far from
being well understood due to the lack of a large sample. The low dust temperature (< 14 K) of Planck
cold clumps makes them promising candidates for prestellar objects or for sources at the very initial
stages of protostellar collapse. We have been conducting a series of observations toward Planck cold
clumps (PCCs) with ground-based radio telescopes. In general, when compared with other star forming
samples (e.g. infrared dark clouds), PCCs are more quiescent, suggesting that most of them may be in
the earliest phase of star formation. However, some PCCs are associated with protostars and molecular
outflows, indicating that not all PCCs are in a prestellar phase. We have identified hundreds of starless
dense clumps from a mapping survey with the Purple Mountain Observatory (PMO) 13.7-m telescope.
Follow-up observations suggest that these dense clumps are ideal targets to search for prestellar objects.
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Publications of the Korean Astronomical Society 30: 079-082, 2015 September
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