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Aims.We aim to identify and characterize cores in the high-mass protocluster W49A, determine their evolutionary stages, and measure the associated lifetimes. Methods.We built a catalog of 129 cores extracted from an ALMA 1.3 mm continuum image at 0.26″ (2900 au) angular resolution. The association between cores and hypercompact or ultracompact HII(H/UC HII) regions was established from the analysis of VLA 3.3 cm continuum and H30αline observations. We also looked for emission of hot molecular cores (HMCs) using the methyl formate doublet at 218.29 GHz. Results.We identified 40 cores associated with an H/UC HIIregion and 19 HMCs over the ALMA mosaic. The 52 cores with an H/UC HIIregion and/or an HMC are assumed to be high-mass protostellar cores, while the rest of the core population likely consists of prestellar cores and low-mass protostellar cores. We found a good agreement between the two tracers of ionized gas, with 23 common detections and only four cores detected at 3.3 cm and not in H30α. The spectral indexes from 3.3 cm to 1.3 mm range from 1, for the youngest cores with partially optically thick free-free emission, to about −0.1, which is for the optically thin free-free emission obtained for cores that are likely more evolved. Conclusions.Using the H/UC HIIregions as a reference, we found the statistical lifetimes of the HMC and massive protostellar phases in W49N to be about 6 × 104yr and 1.4 × 105yr, respectively. We also showed that HMCs can coexist with H/UC HIIregions during a short fraction of the core lifetime, about 2 × 104yr. This indicates a rapid dispersal of the inner molecule envelope once the HC HIIis formed.more » « less
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The Milky Way’s Central Molecular Zone (CMZ) differs dramatically from our local solar neighbourhood, both in the extreme interstellar medium conditions it exhibits (e.g. high gas, stellar, and feedback density) and in the strong dynamics at play (e.g. due to shear and gas influx along the bar). Consequently, it is likely that there are large-scale physical structures within the CMZ that cannot form elsewhere in the Milky Way. In this paper, we present new results from the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) large programme ACES (ALMA CMZ Exploration Survey) and conduct a multi-wavelength and kinematic analysis to determine the origin of the M0.8–0.2 ring, a molecular cloud with a distinct ring-like morphology. We estimate the projected inner and outer radii of the M0.8–0.2 ring to be 79″ and 154″, respectively (3.1 pc and 6.1 pc at an assumed Galactic Centre distance of 8.2 kpc) and calculate a mean gas density >104cm−3, a mass of ~106M⊙, and an expansion speed of ~20 km s−1, resulting in a high estimated kinetic energy (>1051erg) and momentum (>107M⊙km s−1). We discuss several possible causes for the existence and expansion of the structure, including stellar feedback and large-scale dynamics. We propose that the most likely cause of the M0.8–0.2 ring is a single high-energy hypernova explosion. To viably explain the observed morphology and kinematics, such an explosion would need to have taken place inside a dense, very massive molecular cloud, the remnants of which we now see as the M0.8–0.2 ring. In this case, the structure provides an extreme example of how supernovae can affect molecular clouds.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available November 1, 2025
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