Super Hot Cores in NGC 253: Witnessing the formation and early evolution of Super Star Clusters (1909.11385v2)
Abstract: Using $0.2{\prime \prime}$ ($\sim3$ pc) ALMA images of vibrationally excited HC$3$N emission (HC$_3$N$*$) we reveal the presence of $8$ unresolved Super Hot Cores (SHCs) in the inner $160$ pc of NGC\,253. Our LTE and non-LTE modelling of the HC$_3$N$*$ emission indicate that SHCs have dust temperatures of $200-375$ K, relatively high H$_2$ densities of $1-6\times 10{6}$ cm${-3}$ and high IR luminosities of $0.1-1\times 108$ L$\odot$. As expected from their short lived phase ($\sim 104$ yr), all SHCs are associated with young Super Star Clusters (SSCs). We use the ratio of luminosities form the SHCs (protostar phase) and from the free-free emission (ZAMS star phase), to establish the evolutionary stage of the SSCs. The youngest SSCs, with the larges ratios, have ages of a few $104$ yr (proto-SSCs) and the more evolved SSCs are likely between $105$ and $106$ yr (ZAMS-SSCs). The different evolutionary stages of the SSCs are also supported by the radiative feedback from the UV radiation as traced by the HNCO/CS ratio, with this ratio being systematically higher in the young proto-SSCs than in the older ZAMS-SSCs. We also estimate the SFR and the SFE of the SSCs. The trend found in the estimated SFE ($\sim40\%$ for proto-SSCs and $>85\%$ for ZAMS-SSCs) and in the gas mass reservoir available for star formation, one order of magnitude higher for proto-SSCs, suggests that star formation is still going on in proto-SSCs. We also find that the most evolved SSCs are located, in projection, closer to the center of the galaxy than the younger proto-SSCs, indicating an inside-out SSC formation scenario.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.