7,000 research outputs found
Does a prestellar core always become protostellar? Tracing the evolution of cores from the prestellar to protostellar phase
Recently, a subset of starless cores whose thermal Jeans mass is apparently
overwhelmed by the mass of the core has been identified, e.g., the core {\small
L183}. In literature, massive cores such as this one are often referred to as
"super-Jeans cores". As starless cores are perhaps on the cusp of forming
stars, a study of their dynamics will improve our understanding of the
transition from the prestellar to the protostellar phase. In the present work
we use non-magnetic polytropes belonging originally to the family of the
Isothermal sphere. For the purpose, perturbations were applied to individual
polytropes, first by replacing the isothermal gas with a gas that was cold near
the centre of the polytrope and relatively warm in the outer regions, and
second, through a slight compression of the polytrope by raising the external
confining pressure. Using this latter configuration we identify thermodynamic
conditions under which a core is likely to remain starless. In fact, we also
argue that the attribute "super-Jeans" is subjective and that these cores do
not formally violate the Jeans stability criterion. On the basis of our test
results we suggest that gas temperature in a star-forming cloud is crucial
towards the formation and evolution of a core. Simulations in this work were
performed using the particle-based Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics algorithm.
However, to establish numerical convergence of the results we suggest similar
tests with a grid-scheme, such as the Adaptive mesh refinement.Comment: 14 pages, 24 figures and 1 table; To appear in Monthly Notices of the
Royal Astronomical Societ
An Extinction Threshold for Protostellar Cores in Ophiuchus
We have observed continuum emission at lambda = 850 microns over ~4 square
degrees of the Ophiuchus star-forming cloud using SCUBA on the JCMT, producing
a submillimetre continuum map twenty times larger than previous Ophiuchus
surveys. Our sensitivity is 40 mJ/beam, a factor of ~2 less sensitive than
earlier maps. Using an automated identification algorithm, we detect 100
candidate objects. Only two new objects are detected outside the boundary of
previous maps, despite the much wider area surveyed. We compare the
submillimetre continuum map with a map of visual extinction across the
Ophiuchus cloud derived using a combination of 2MASS and R-band data. The total
mass in submillimetre objects is ~ 50 Msun compared with ~ 2000 Msun in
observed cloud mass estimated from the extinction. The submillimetre objects
represent only 2.5% of the cloud mass. A clear association is seen between the
locations of detected submillimetre objects and high visual extinction, with no
objects detected at A_V<7 magnitudes. Using the extinction map, we estimate
pressures within the cloud from P/k ~2x10^5 cm^-3 K in the less-extincted
regions to P/k ~2x10^6 cm^-3 K at the cloud centre. Given our sensitivities,
cold (T_d ~15K) clumps supported by thermal pressure, had they existed, should
have been detected throughout the majority of the map. Such objects may not be
present at low A_V because they may form only where A_V > 15, by some mechanism
(e.g., loss of non-thermal support).Comment: 12 pages, 1 figure. Accepted by Astrophysical Journal Letter
Rapid Serial Visual Presentation. Degradation of inferential reading comprehension as a function of speed
There is increasing interest in the readability of text presented on small digital screens. Designers have come up with novel text presentation methods, such as moving text from right to left, line-stepping, or showing successive text segments such as phrases or single words in a RSVP format. Comparative studies have indicated that RSVP is perhaps the best method of presenting text in a limited space. We tested the method using 209 participants divided into six groups. The groups included traditional reading, and RSVP reading at rates of 250, 300, 350, 400, and 450 wpm. No significant differences were found in comprehension for normal reading and RSVP reading at rates of 250, 300 and 350 wpm. However, higher rates produced significantly lower comprehension scores. It remains to be determined if, with additional practice and improved methods, good levels of reading comprehension at high rates can be achieved with RSV
A Pre-Protostellar Core in L1551. II. State of Dynamical and Chemical Evolution
Both analytic and numerical radiative transfer models applied to high
spectral resolution CS and N2H+ data give insight into the evolutionary state
of L1551 MC. This recently discovered pre-protostellar core in L1551 appears to
be in the early stages of dynamical evolution. Line-of-sight infall velocities
of >0.1km/s are needed in the outer regions of L1551 MC to adequately fit the
data. This translates to an accretion rate of ~ 1e-6 Msun/yr, uncertain to
within a factor of 5 owing to unknown geometry. The observed dynamics are not
due to spherically symmetric gravitational collapse and are not consistent with
the standard model of low-mass star formation. The widespread, fairly uniform
CS line asymmetries are more consistent with planar infall. There is modest
evidence for chemical depletion in the radial profiles of CS and C18O
suggesting that L1551 MC is also chemically young. The models are not very
sensitive to chemical evolution. L1551 MC lies within a quiescent region of
L1551 and is evidence for continued star formation in this evolved cloud.Comment: 27 pages, 7 figures, ApJ accepte
Correlating Infall with Deuterium Fractionation in Dense Cores
We present a survey of HCO+ (3-2) observations pointed towards dense cores
with previous measurements of N(N2D+)/N(N2H+). Of the 26 cores in this survey,
five show the spectroscopic signature of outward motion, nine exhibit neither
inward nor outward motion, eleven appear to be infalling, and one is not
detected. We compare the degree of deuterium fractionation with infall
velocities calculated from the HCO+ spectra and find that those cores with
[D]/[H] > 0.1 are more likely to have the signature of inward motions than
cores with smaller [D]/[H] ratios. Infall motions are also much more common in
cores with masses exceeding their thermal Jeans masses. The fastest infall
velocity measured belongs to one of the two protostellar cores in our survey,
L1521F, and the observed motions are typically on the order of the sound speed.Comment: Accepted to Ap
The disk around the brown dwarf KPNO Tau 3
We present submillimeter observations of the young brown dwarfs KPNO Tau 1,
KPNO Tau 3, and KPNO Tau 6 at 450 micron and 850 micron taken with the
Submillimeter Common-User Bolometer Array on the James Clerke Maxwell
Telescope. KPNO Tau 3 and KPNO Tau 6 have been previously identified as Class
II objects hosting accretion disks, whereas KPNO Tau 1 has been identified as a
Class III object and shows no evidence of circumsubstellar material. Our 3
sigma detection of cold dust around KPNO Tau 3 implies a total disk mass of
(4.0 +/- 1.1) x 10^{-4} Msolar (assuming a gas to dust ratio of 100:1). We
place tight constraints on any disks around KPNO Tau 1 or KPNO Tau 6 of <2.1 x
10^{-4} Msolar and <2.7 x 10^{-4} Msolar, respectively. Modeling the spectral
energy distribution of KPNO Tau 3 and its disk suggests the disk properties
(geometry, dust mass, and grain size distribution) are consistent with
observations of other brown dwarf disks and low-mass T-Tauri stars. In
particular, the disk-to-host mass ratio for KPNO Tau 3 is congruent with the
scenario that at least some brown dwarfs form via the same mechanism as
low-mass stars.Comment: 18 pages (preprint format), 3 figures, published in Ap
From Filamentary Networks to Dense Cores in Molecular Clouds: Toward a New Paradigm for Star Formation
Recent studies of the nearest star-forming clouds of the Galaxy at
submillimeter wavelengths with the Herschel Space Observatory have provided us
with unprecedented images of the initial and boundary conditions of the star
formation process. The Herschel results emphasize the role of interstellar
filaments in the star formation process and connect remarkably well with nearly
a decade's worth of numerical simulations and theory that have consistently
shown that the ISM should be highly filamentary on all scales and star
formation is intimately related to self-gravitating filaments. In this review,
we trace how the apparent complexity of cloud structure and star formation is
governed by relatively simple universal processes - from filamentary clumps to
galactic scales. We emphasize two crucial and complementary aspects: (i) the
key observational results obtained with Herschel over the past three years,
along with relevant new results obtained from the ground on the kinematics of
interstellar structures, and (ii) the key existing theoretical models and the
many numerical simulations of interstellar cloud structure and star formation.
We then synthesize a comprehensive physical picture that arises from the
confrontation of these observations and simulations.Comment: 24 pages, 15 figures. Accepted for publication as a review chapter in
Protostars and Planets VI, University of Arizona Press (2014), eds. H.
Beuther, R. Klessen, C. Dullemond, Th. Hennin
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