HONKAI identifies 193 dense cores in 16 clumps within three IRDCs, finding most have virial ratios >1 but mass-size relations below the massive star formation threshold and a steeper high-mass CMF slope.
Title resolution pending
4 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
years
2026 4representative citing papers
A new scale-aware diagnostic framework shows that unconstrained diffusion generative models exhibit structural freezing and instability instead of smooth physical responses under multiscale perturbations.
New CO(2-1) observations of 112 clumps in outer Galactic clouds (14-23 kpc) yield velocity dispersion-size and mass-size power laws plus a declining virial parameter trend indicating most clumps are gravitationally unbound.
New observations confirm hourglass magnetic fields at clump scales in G35.20-0.74, with strengths of approximately 600 μG in G35N and 850 μG in G35S, supporting magnetically regulated collapse in G35N and feedback influence in G35S.
citing papers explorer
-
A tool of Hierarchical cOre ideNtification and Kinematic property AssIgnment (HONKAI) for Dense Cores
HONKAI identifies 193 dense cores in 16 clumps within three IRDCs, finding most have virial ratios >1 but mass-size relations below the massive star formation threshold and a steeper high-mass CMF slope.
-
Scale-Aware Adversarial Analysis: A Diagnostic for Generative AI in Multiscale Complex Systems
A new scale-aware diagnostic framework shows that unconstrained diffusion generative models exhibit structural freezing and instability instead of smooth physical responses under multiscale perturbations.
-
Molecular Clouds at the Edge of the Galaxy II. Physical properties and scaling relations
New CO(2-1) observations of 112 clumps in outer Galactic clouds (14-23 kpc) yield velocity dispersion-size and mass-size power laws plus a declining virial parameter trend indicating most clumps are gravitationally unbound.
-
Investigation of Hourglass-shaped Magnetic fields in the G35.20-0.74 Star-Forming Complex
New observations confirm hourglass magnetic fields at clump scales in G35.20-0.74, with strengths of approximately 600 μG in G35N and 850 μG in G35S, supporting magnetically regulated collapse in G35N and feedback influence in G35S.