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Creators/Authors contains: "Pillai, Thushara_G S"

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  1. Context. The Milky Way’s central molecular zone (CMZ) has been measured to form stars ten times less efficiently than in the Galactic disk, based on emission from high-mass stars. However, the CMZ’s low-mass (⩽2M) protostellar population, which accounts for most of the initial stellar mass budget and star formation rate (SFR), is poorly constrained observationally due to limited sensitivity and resolution. Aims. We aim to perform a cloud-wide census of the protostellar population in three massive CMZ clouds. Methods. We present the Dual-band Unified Exploration of three CMZ Clouds (DUET) survey, targeting the 20 km s−1cloud, Sgr C, and the dust ridge cloud “e” using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) at 1.3 and 3 mm. The mosaicked observations achieve a comparable resolution of 0.′′2–0.′′3 (∼2000 au) and a sky coverage of 8.3–10.4 arcmin2, respectively. Results. We report 563 continuum sources at 1.3 mm and 330 at 3 mm, respectively, and a dual-band catalog with 450 continuum sources. These sources are marginally resolved at a resolution of 2000 au. We find a universal deviation (>70% of the source sample) from commonly used dust modified blackbody (MBB) models, characterized by either low spectral indices or low brightness temperatures. Conclusions. Three possible explanations are discussed for the deviation. (1) Optically thick class 0/I young stellar objects (YSOs) with a very small beam filling factor can lead to lower brightness temperatures than what MBB models predict. (2) Large dust grains with millimeter or centimeter in size have more significant self-scattering, and frequency-dependent albedo could therefore cause lower spectral indices. (3) Free-free emission over 30 μJy can severely contaminate dust emission and cause low spectral indices for milliJansky sources, although the number of massive protostars (embedded UCHIIregions) needed is infeasibly high for the normal stellar initial mass function. A reliable measurement of the SFR at low protostellar masses will require future work to distinguish between these possible explanations. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available May 1, 2026
  2. Abstract We use polarization data from SOFIA HAWC+ to investigate the interplay between magnetic fields and stellar feedback in altering gas dynamics within the high-mass star-forming region RCW 36, located in Vela C. This region is of particular interest as it has a bipolar Hiiregion powered by a massive star cluster, which may be impacting the surrounding magnetic field. To determine if this is the case, we apply the histogram of relative orientations (HRO) method to quantify the relative alignment between the inferred magnetic field and elongated structures observed in several data sets such as dust emission, column density, temperature, and spectral line intensity maps. The HRO results indicate a bimodal alignment trend, where structures observed with dense gas tracers show a statistically significant preference for perpendicular alignment relative to the magnetic field, while structures probed by the photodissociation region (PDR) tracers tend to align preferentially parallel relative to the magnetic field. Moreover, the dense gas and PDR associated structures are found to be kinematically distinct such that a bimodal alignment trend is also observed as a function of line-of-sight velocity. This suggests that the magnetic field may have been dynamically important and set a preferred direction of gas flow at the time that RCW 36 formed, resulting in a dense ridge developing perpendicular to the magnetic field. However, on filament scales near the PDR region, feedback may be energetically dominating the magnetic field, warping its geometry and the associated flux-frozen gas structures, causing the observed preference for parallel relative alignment. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available November 1, 2025
  3. Abstract We have comprehensively studied the multiscale physical properties of the massive infrared dark cloud G28.34 (the Dragon cloud) with dust polarization and molecular line data from Planck, FCRAO-14 m, James Clerk Maxwell Telescope, and Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array. We find that the averaged magnetic fields of clumps tend to be either parallel with or perpendicular to the cloud-scale magnetic fields, while the cores in clump MM4 tend to have magnetic fields aligned with the clump fields. Implementing the relative orientation analysis (for magnetic fields, column density gradients, and local gravity), velocity gradient technique, and modified Davis–Chandrasekhar–Fermi analysis, we find that G28.34 is located in a trans-to-sub-Alfvénic environment; the magnetic field is effectively resisting gravitational collapse in large-scale diffuse gas, but is distorted by gravity within the cloud and affected by star formation activities in high-density regions, and the normalized mass-to-flux ratio tends to increase with increasing density and decreasing radius. Considering the thermal, magnetic, and turbulent supports, we find that the environmental gas of G28.34 is in a supervirial (supported) state, the infrared dark clumps may be in a near-equilibrium state, and core MM4-core4 is in a subvirial (gravity-dominant) state. In summary, we suggest that magnetic fields dominate gravity and turbulence in the cloud environment at large scales, resulting in relatively slow cloud formation and evolution processes. Within the cloud, gravity could overwhelm both magnetic fields and turbulence, allowing local dynamical star formation to happen. 
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