Massive stars in the Milky Way form over Myr timescales that increase with final mass, inferred from joint LF fitting of compact HII regions and OB stars under the inertial-inflow model.
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4 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
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2026 4verdicts
UNVERDICTED 4roles
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Observational study of MBM12 shows CO-to-H2 conversion factor near galactic average with density-dependent variations, high virial parameters decreasing at small scales, broken power-law mass-size relations indicating external pressure, and magnetic field orientation transition at N(H2) = 4.5e21 cm-
Stronger radiation environments produce more massive, hotter protostellar discs whose fragments are large and disruptive rather than planetary-mass.
Gravity and turbulence together reproduce the observed j ~ R^{3/2} scaling in molecular cloud clumps, with magnetic fields creating filamentary structures whose apparent match may be an artifact.
citing papers explorer
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Compact HII Regions as Clocks of Massive-Star Formation: Evidence for Long Formation Timescales
Massive stars in the Milky Way form over Myr timescales that increase with final mass, inferred from joint LF fitting of compact HII regions and OB stars under the inertial-inflow model.
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B-Fields and Star Formation across Scales with TRAO (B-FROST): CO Abundances, Dynamics and Relative Orientations in the Translucent High Latitude Cloud MBM12
Observational study of MBM12 shows CO-to-H2 conversion factor near galactic average with density-dependent variations, high virial parameters decreasing at small scales, broken power-law mass-size relations indicating external pressure, and magnetic field orientation transition at N(H2) = 4.5e21 cm-
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The Impact of Radiation Environment on the Evolution and Fragmentation of Protostellar Discs
Stronger radiation environments produce more massive, hotter protostellar discs whose fragments are large and disruptive rather than planetary-mass.
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On the role of gravity, turbulence, and the magnetic field in angular momentum transfer within molecular clouds
Gravity and turbulence together reproduce the observed j ~ R^{3/2} scaling in molecular cloud clumps, with magnetic fields creating filamentary structures whose apparent match may be an artifact.