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		| Paper: | 
		The Dynamics and Chemistry of Massive Starless Cores | 
	 
	
		| Volume: | 
		476, New Trends in Radio Astronomy in the ALMA Era | 
	 
	
		| Page: | 
		123 | 
	 
	
		| Authors: | 
		Tan, J. C.; Kong, S.; Butler, M. J.; Caselli, P.; Fontani, F. | 
	 
	
	
		| Abstract: | 
		How do massive stars form? They may be born from massive pre-stellar
 gas cores that are much more massive than the Jeans mass. The
 Turbulent Core Accretion model invokes such cores as being in
 approximate virial and pressure equilibrium with their surrounding
 clump medium. Their internal pressure is provided by a combination of
 turbulence and magnetic fields. On the other hand, the Competitive
 Accretion model requires strongly sub-virial initial conditions that
 then lead to extensive fragmentation to the thermal Jeans scale, with
 high-mass stars later forming by competitive Bondi-Hoyle accretion. To
 test these models, we have identified four prime examples of massive
 (∼ 100 M☉) clumps from mid-infrared (MIR) extinction
 mapping of Infrared Dark Clouds (IRDCs). At
 ∼16″ resolution, we found high deuteration fractions of
 N2H+ in these objects, consistent with them being
 starless. We then observed these 4 clumps with ALMA in Cycle 0 to
 probe the N2D+(3-2) line at ∼2″ resolution,
 finding 6 N2D+ cores. Their observed velocity dispersions
 and sizes are broadly consistent with the predictions of the Turbulent
 Core model of virialized, magnetized (with Alfvén Mach number mA
 ∼ 1), self-gravitating cores that are bounded by the high
 pressures of their surrounding clumps. However, the most massive core
 with ∼ 60 M☉, appears to require moderately enhanced
 magnetic fields to be in virial equilibrium, implying mA ≃  0.3. If confirmed, this suggests magnetic fields play a greater role
 than turbulence in setting the initial conditions of massive star
 formation. In this case the timescale for the core to be assembled may
 be significantly longer than a local dynamical or free-fall time. This
 is consistent with astrochemical modeling of the deuteration ages of
 the cores, which indicates a core age similar to the ambipolar
 diffusion time. | 
	 
	
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