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We observed the W51 high-mass star-forming complex with ALMAs longest-baseline configurations, achieving an angular resolution of $sim$20 milliarcseconds, corresponding to a linear resolution of $sim$100 au at $D_{mathrm{W51}}=5.4$ kpc. The observed region contains three high-mass protostars in which the dust continuum emission at 1.3 mm is optically-thick up to a radius $lesssim$1000 au and has brightness temperatures $gtrsim$200 K. The high luminosity ($gtrsim10^4$ L$_{odot}$) in the absence of free-free emission suggests the presence of massive stars ($Mgtrsim20$ M$_{odot}$) at the earliest stages of their formation. Our continuum images reveal remarkably complex and filamentary structures arising from compact cores. Molecular emission shows no clear signs of rotation nor infall on scales from 150 to 2000 au: we do not detect disks. The central sources drive young ($sim$100 years), fast ($sim 100$ km s$^{-1}$), powerful ($dot{M}>10^{-4}$ M$_{odot} yr^{-1}$), collimated outflows. These outflows provide indirect evidence of accretion disks on scales $rlesssim$100--500 au (depending on the object). The active outflows are connected to fossil flows that have different orientations on larger spatial scales, implying that the orientations of these small disks change over time. These results together support a variant of an accretion model for high-mass star formation in which massive protostars do not form a large, stable Keplerian disk during their early stages, but instead they accrete material from multiple massive flows with different angular momentum vectors. This scenario therefore contrasts with the simplified classic paradigm of a stable disk+jet system, which is the standard model for low-mass star formation, and provides an experimental confirmation of a multi-directional and unsteady accretion model for massive star formation.
We present Submillimeter Array (SMA) molecular line observations in two 2 GHz-wide bands centered at 217.5 and 227.5 GHz, toward the massive star forming region W51 North. We identified 84 molecular line transitions from 17 species and their isotopol
The accretion history of protostars remains widely mysterious even though it represents one of the best ways to understand the protostellar collapse that leads to the formation of stars. Molecular outflows are here used to characterize the protostell
We present results of continuum and spectral line observations with ALMA and 22 GHz water (H$_2$O) maser observations using KaVA and VERA toward a high-mass star-forming region, G25.82-0.17. Multiple 1.3 mm continuum sources are revealed, indicating
We present a detailed characterization of the population of compact radio-continuum sources in W51 A using subarcsecond VLA and ALMA observations. We analyzed their 2-cm continuum, the recombination lines (RLs) H77$alpha$ and H30$alpha$, and the line
While the stellar Initial Mass Function (IMF) appears to be close to universal within the Milky Way galaxy, it is strongly suspected to be different in the primordial Universe, where molecular hydrogen cooling is less efficient and the gas temperatur