438 research outputs found
Chemical Variation in Molecular Cloud Cores in the Orion A Cloud
We have observed molecular cloud cores in the Orion A giant molecular cloud
(GMC) in CCS, HC3N, DNC, and HN13C to study their chemical characteristics. We
have detected CCS in the Orion A GMC for the first time. CCS was detected in
about a third of the observed cores. The cores detected in CCS are not
localized but are widely distributed over the Orion A GMC. The CCS peak
intensity of the core tends to be high in the southern region of the Orion A
GMC. The HC3N peak intensity of the core also tends to be high in the southern
region, while there are HC3N intense cores near Orion KL, which is not seen in
CCS. The core associated with Orion KL shows broad HC3N line profile, and star
formation activity near Orion KL seems to enhance the HC3N emission. The column
density ratio of NH3 to CCS is lower near the middle of the filament, and is
higher toward the northern and southern regions along the Orion A GMC filament.
This ratio is known to trace the chemical evolution in nearby dark cloud cores,
but seems to be affected by core gas temperature in the Orion A GMC: cores with
low NH3 to CCS column density ratios tend to have warmer gas temperature. The
value of the column density ratio of DNC to HN13C is generally similar to that
in dark cloud cores, but becomes lower around Orion KL due to higher gas
temperature.Comment: 26 pages, 18 figures, to be published in Publications of the
Astronomical Society of Japa
Depletion of CCS in a Candidate Warm-Carbon-Chain-Chemistry Source L483
We have carried out an observation of the CCS (=21) line
with the Very Large Array in its D-configuration toward a protostellar core
L483 (IRAS~181400440). This is a candidate source of the newly found
carbon-chain rich environment called "Warm-Carbon-Chain-Chemistry (WCCC)",
according to the previous observations of carbon-chain molecules. The CCS
distribution in L483 is found to consist of two clumps aligned in the
northwest-southeast direction, well tracing the CCS ridge observed with the
single-dish radio telescope. The most remarkable feature is that CCS is
depleted at the core center. Such a CCS distribution with the central hole is
consistent with those of previously observed prestellar and protostellar cores,
but it is rather unexpected for L483. This is because the distribution of CS,
which is usually similar to that of CCS, is centrally peaked. Our results imply
that the CCS (=21) line would selectively trace the outer
cold envelope in the chemically less evolved phase that is seriously resolved
out with the interferometric observation. Thus, it is most likely that the high
abundance of CCS in L483 relative to the other WCCC sources is not due to the
activity of the protostar, although it would be related to its younger chemical
evolutionary stage, or a short timescale of the prestellar phase.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ Part
A collimated jet and an infalling-rotating disk in G192.16-3.84 traced by H2O maser emission
We report H2O masers associated with the massive-star forming region
G192.16-3.84 observed with the new Japan VLBI network at three epochs spanned
for two months, which have revealed the three-dimensional kinematical structure
of the whole \h2o maser region in G192.16-3.84, containing two young stellar
objects separated by ~1200 AU. The maser spatio-kinematical structure has well
persisted since previous observations, in which the masers are expected to be
associated with a highly-collimated bipolar jet and an infalling-rotating disk
in the northern and southern clusters of H2O maser features, respectively. We
estimated a jet expansion speed of ~100 km/s and re-estimated a dynamical age
of the whole jet to be 5.6x10^4 yrs. We have investigated the spatial
distribution of Doppler velocities during the previous and present observations
and relative proper motions of H2O maser features in the southern cluster, and
a relative bulk motion between the two maser clusters. They are well explained
by a model of an infalling-rotating disk with a radius of ~1000 AU and a
central stellar mass of 5-10 M_sun, rather than by a model of a bipolar jet
perpendicular to the observed CO outflow. Based on the derived H2O maser
spatio-kinematical parameters, we discuss the formation mechanism of the
massive young stellar objects and the outflow development in G192.16-3.84.Comment: 30 pages, 3 figures, 3 tables, to be published in the Publication of
the Astronomical Society of Japan issued on 2006 October 2
Astrometry of HO Masers in Nearby Star-Forming Regions with VERA --- IV. L1448C
We have carried out multi-epoch VLBI observations with VERA (VLBI Exploration
of Radio Astrometry) of the 22~GHz HO masers associated with a Class 0
protostar L1448C in the Perseus molecular cloud. The maser features trace the
base of collimated bipolar jet driven by one of the infrared counter parts of
L1448C named as L1448C(N) or L1448-mm A. We detected possible evidences for
apparent acceleration and precession of the jet according to the
three-dimensional velocity structure. Based on the phase-referencing VLBI
astrometry, we have successfully detected an annual parallax of the HO
maser in L1448C to be 4.310.33~milliarcseconds (mas) which corresponds to
a distance of 23218~pc from the Sun. The present result is in good
agreement with that of another HO maser source NGC~1333 SVS13A in the
Perseus molecular cloud, 235~pc. It is also consistent with the photometric
distance, 220~pc. Thus, the distance to the western part of the Perseus
molecular cloud complex would be constrained to be about 235~pc rather than the
larger value, 300~pc, previously reported.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in PAS
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