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The Next Generation Very Large Array (ngVLA) has excellent capabilities to unveil various dynamical and chemical processes in massive star formation at the unexplored innermost regions. Based on the recent observations of ALMA/VLA as well as theoretical predictions, we propose several intriguing topics in massive star formation from the perspective of the ngVLA. In the disk scale of $lesssim$ 100 au around massive protostars, dust grains are expected to be destructed/sublimated because the physical conditions of temperature, shocks, and radiation are much more intense than those in the envelopes, which are typically observed as hot cores. The high sensitivity and resolution of the ngVLA will enable us to detect the gaseous refractories released by dust destruction, e.g., SiO, NaCl, and AlO, which trace disk kinematics and give new insights into the metallic elements in star-forming regions, i.e., astromineralogy. The multi-epoch survey by the ngVLA will provide demographics of forming massive multiples with separations of $lesssim$ 10 au with their proper motion. Combining with observations of refractory molecular lines and hydrogen recombination lines, we can reproduce the three-dimensional orbital motions of massive proto-binaries. Moreover, the 1-mas resolution of the ngVLA could possibly take the first-ever picture of the photospheric surface of an accreting protostar, if it is bloated to the au scale by the high accretion rates of mass and thermal energy.
The magnetic field plays an important role in every stage of the star-formation process from the collapse of the initial protostellar core to the stars arrival on the main sequence. Consequently, the goal of this science case is to explore a wide ran
We present high resolution (0.2, 1000 AU) 1.3 mm ALMA observations of massive infrared dark cloud clump, G028.37+00.07-C1, thought to harbor the early stages of massive star formation. Using $rm N_2D^+$(3-2) we resolve the previously identified C1-S
We study the formation of massive Population III binary stars using a newly developed radiation hydrodynamics code with the adaptive mesh refinement and adaptive ray-tracing methods. We follow the evolution of a typical primordial star-forming cloud
Imaging the bright maser emission produced by several molecular species at centimeter wavelengths is an essential tool for understanding the process of massive star formation because it provides a way to probe the kinematics of dense molecular gas at
We address the problem of the origin of massive stars, namely the origin, path and timescale of the mass flows that create them. Based on extensive numerical simulations, we propose a scenario where massive stars are assembled by large-scale, converg