527 research outputs found
First measurements of 15N fractionation in N2H+ toward high-mass star forming cores
We report on the first measurements of the isotopic ratio 14N/15N in N2H+
toward a statistically significant sample of high-mass star forming cores. The
sources belong to the three main evolutionary categories of the high-mass star
formation process: high-mass starless cores, high-mass protostellar objects,
and ultracompact HII regions. Simultaneous measurements of 14N/15N in CN have
been made. The 14N/15N ratios derived from N2H+ show a large spread (from ~180
up to ~1300), while those derived from CN are in between the value measured in
the terrestrial atmosphere (~270) and that of the proto-Solar nebula (~440) for
the large majority of the sources within the errors. However, this different
spread might be due to the fact that the sources detected in the N2H+
isotopologues are more than those detected in the CN ones. The 14N/15N ratio
does not change significantly with the source evolutionary stage, which
indicates that time seems to be irrelevant for the fractionation of nitrogen.
We also find a possible anticorrelation between the 14N/15N (as derived from
N2H+) and the H/D isotopic ratios. This suggests that 15N enrichment could not
be linked to the parameters that cause D enrichment, in agreement with the
prediction by recent chemical models. These models, however, are not able to
reproduce the observed large spread in 14N/15N, pointing out that some
important routes of nitrogen fractionation could be still missing in the
models.Comment: 2 Figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
First ALMA maps of HCO, an important precursor of complex organic molecules, towards IRAS 16293-2422
The formyl radical HCO has been proposed as the basic precursor of many
complex organic molecules such as methanol (CHOH) or glycolaldehyde
(CHOHCHO). Using ALMA, we have mapped, for the first time at high angular
resolution (1, 140 au), HCO towards the Solar-type
protostellar binary IRAS 162932422, where numerous complex organic molecules
have been previously detected. We also detected several lines of the chemically
related species HCO, CHOH and CHOHCHO. The observations revealed
compact HCO emission arising from the two protostars. The line profiles also
show redshifted absorption produced by foreground material of the circumbinary
envelope that is infalling towards the protostars. Additionally, IRAM 30m
single-dish data revealed a more extended HCO component arising from the common
circumbinary envelope. The comparison between the observed molecular abundances
and our chemical model suggests that whereas the extended HCO from the envelope
can be formed via gas-phase reactions during the cold collapse of the natal
core, the HCO in the hot corinos surrounding the protostars is predominantly
formed by the hydrogenation of CO on the surface of dust grains and subsequent
thermal desorption during the protostellar phase. The derived abundance of HCO
in the dust grains is high enough to produce efficiently more complex species
such as HCO, CHOH, and CHOHCHO by surface chemistry. We found that
the main formation route of CHOHCHO is the reaction between HCO and
CHOH.Comment: Accepted in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society; 19
pages, 12 figures, 7 table
Protonated CO2 in massive star-forming clumps
Interstellar CO2 is an important reservoir of carbon and oxygen, and one of
the major constituents of the icy mantles of dust grains, but it is not
observable directly in the cold gas because has no permanent dipole moment. Its
protonated form, HOCO+, is believed to be a good proxy for gaseous CO2.
However, it has been detected in only a few star-forming regions so far, so
that its interstellar chemistry is not well understood. We present new
detections of HOCO+ lines in 11 high-mass star-forming clumps. Our observations
increase by more than three times the number of detections in star-forming
regions so far. We have derived beam-averaged abundances relative to H2 in
between 0.3 and 3.8 x 10^{-11}. We have compared these values with the
abundances of H13CO+, a possible gas-phase precursor of HOCO+, and CH3OH, a
product of surface chemistry. We have found a positive correlation with H13CO+,
while with CH3OH there is no correlation. We suggest that the gas-phase
formation route starting from HCO+ plays an important role in the formation of
HOCO+, perhaps more relevant than protonation of CO2 (upon evaporation of this
latter from icy dust mantles).Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in MNRA
Gas Kinematics and Excitation in the Filamentary IRDC G035.39-00.33
Some theories of dense molecular cloud formation involve dynamical
environments driven by converging atomic flows or collisions between
preexisting molecular clouds. The determination of the dynamics and physical
conditions of the gas in clouds at the early stages of their evolution is
essential to establish the dynamical imprints of such collisions, and to infer
the processes involved in their formation. We present multi-transition 13CO and
C18O maps toward the IRDC G035.39-00.33, believed to be at the earliest stages
of evolution. The 13CO and C18O gas is distributed in three filaments
(Filaments 1, 2 and 3), where the most massive cores are preferentially found
at the intersecting regions between them. The filaments have a similar
kinematic structure with smooth velocity gradients of ~0.4-0.8 km s-1 pc-1.
Several scenarios are proposed to explain these gradients, including cloud
rotation, gas accretion along the filaments, global gravitational collapse, and
unresolved sub-filament structures. These results are complemented by HCO+,
HNC, H13CO+ and HN13C single-pointing data to search for gas infall signatures.
The 13CO and C18O gas motions are supersonic across G035.39-00.33, with the
emission showing broader linewidths toward the edges of the IRDC. This could be
due to energy dissipation at the densest regions in the cloud. The average H2
densities are ~5000-7000 cm-3, with Filaments 2 and 3 being denser and more
massive than Filament 1. The C18O data unveils three regions with high CO
depletion factors (f_D~5-12), similar to those found in massive starless cores.Comment: 20 pages, 14 figures, 6 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA
The NH2D/NH3 ratio toward pre-protostellar cores around the UCHII region in IRAS 20293+3952
The deuterium fractionation, Dfrac, has been proposed as an evolutionary
indicator in pre-protostellar and protostellar cores of low-mass star-forming
regions. We investigate Dfrac, with high angular resolution, in the cluster
environment surrounding the UCHII region IRAS 20293+3952. We performed high
angular resolution observations with the IRAM Plateau de Bure Interferometer
(PdBI) of the ortho-NH2D 1_{11}-1_{01} line at 85.926 GHz and compared them
with previously reported VLA NH3 data. We detected strong NH2D emission toward
the pre-protostellar cores identified in NH3 and dust emission, all located in
the vicinity of the UCHII region IRAS 20293+3952. We found high values of
Dfrac~0.1-0.8 in all the pre-protostellar cores and low values, Dfrac<0.1,
associated with young stellar objects. The high values of Dfrac in
pre-protostellar cores could be indicative of evolution, although outflow
interactions and UV radiation could also play a role.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysics Letter
Water and acetaldehyde in HH212: The first hot corino in Orion
Aims: Using the unprecedented combination of high resolution and sensitivity
offered by ALMA, we aim to investigate whether and how hot corinos,
circumstellar disks, and ejected gas are related in young solar-mass
protostars. Methods: We observed CHCHO and deuterated water (HDO)
high-excitation ( up to 335 K) lines towards the Sun-like protostar
HH212--MM1. Results: For the first time, we have obtained images of CHCHO
and HDO emission in the inner 100 AU of HH212. The multifrequency line
analysis allows us to contrain the density ( 10 cm),
temperature ( 100 K), and CHCHO abundance ( 0.2--2
10) of the emitting region. The HDO profile is asymmetric at low
velocities ( 2 km s from ). If the HDO line is
optically thick, this points to an extremely small ( 20--40 AU) and dense
( 10 cm) emitting region. Conclusions: We report the first
detection of a hot corino in Orion. The HDO asymmetric profile indicates a
contribution of outflowing gas from the compact central region, possibly
associated with a dense disk wind.Comment: Astronomy & Astrophysics Letter, in pres
A gas-rich AGN near the centre of a galaxy cluster at z ~ 1.4
The formation of the first virialized structures in overdensities dates back
to ~9 Gyr ago, i.e. in the redshift range z ~ 1.4 - 1.6. Some models of
structure formation predict that the star formation activity in clusters was
high at that epoch, implying large reservoirs of cold molecular gas. Aiming at
finding a trace of this expected high molecular gas content in primeval
clusters, we searched for the 12CO(2-1) line emission in the most luminous
active galactic nucleus (AGN) of the cluster around the radio galaxy 7C
1756+6520 at z ~ 1.4, one of the farthest spectroscopic confirmed clusters.
This AGN, called AGN.1317, is located in the neighbourhood of the central radio
galaxy at a projected distance of ~780 kpc. The IRAM Plateau de Bure
Interferometer was used to investigate the molecular gas quantity in AGN.1317,
observing the 12CO(2-1) emission line. We detect CO emission in an AGN
belonging to a galaxy cluster at z ~ 1.4. We measured a molecular gas mass of
1.1 x 10^10 Msun, comparable to that found in submillimeter galaxies. In
optical images, AGN.1317 does not seem to be part of a galaxy interaction or
merger.We also derived the nearly instantaneous star formation rate (SFR) from
Halpha flux obtaining a SFR ~65 Msun/yr. This suggests that AGN.1317 is
actively forming stars and will exhaust its reservoir of cold gas in ~0.2-1.0
Gyr.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Broad N2H+ emission towards the protostellar shock L1157-B1
We present the first detection of N2H+ towards a low-mass protostellar
outflow, namely the L1157-B1 shock, at about 0.1 pc from the protostellar
cocoon. The detection was obtained with the IRAM 30-m antenna. We observed
emission at 93 GHz due to the J = 1-0 hyperfine lines. The analysis of the
emission coupled with the HIFI CHESS multiline CO observations leads to the
conclusion that the observed N2H+(1-0) line originates from the dense (> 10^5
cm-3) gas associated with the large (20-25 arcsec) cavities opened by the
protostellar wind. We find a N2H+ column density of few 10^12 cm-2
corresponding to an abundance of (2-8) 10^-9. The N2H+ abundance can be matched
by a model of quiescent gas evolved for more than 10^4 yr, i.e. for more than
the shock kinematical age (about 2000 yr). Modelling of C-shocks confirms that
the abundance of N2H+ is not increased by the passage of the shock. In summary,
N2H+ is a fossil record of the pre-shock gas, formed when the density of the
gas was around 10^4 cm-3, and then further compressed and accelerated by the
shock.Comment: ApJ, in pres
Dense gas in IRAS 20343+4129: an ultracompact HII region caught in the act of creating a cavity
The intermediate- to high-mass star-forming region IRAS 20343+4129 is an
excellent laboratory to study the influence of high- and intermediate-mass
young stellar objects on nearby starless dense cores, and investigate for
possible implications in the clustered star formation process. We present 3 mm
observations of continuum and rotational transitions of several molecular
species (C2H, c-C3H2, N2H+, NH2D) obtained with the Combined Array for Research
in Millimetre-wave Astronomy, as well as 1.3 cm continuum and NH3 observations
carried out with the Very Large Array, to reveal the properties of the dense
gas. We confirm undoubtedly previous claims of an expanding cavity created by
an ultracompact HII region associated with a young B2 zero-age main sequence
(ZAMS) star. The dense gas surrounding the cavity is distributed in a filament
that seems squeezed in between the cavity and a collimated outflow associated
with an intermediate-mass protostar. We have identified 5 millimeter continuum
condensations in the filament. All of them show column densities consistent
with potentially being the birthplace of intermediate- to high-mass objects.
These cores appear different from those observed in low-mass clustered
environments in sereval observational aspects (kinematics, temperature,
chemical gradients), indicating a strong influence of the most massive and
evolved members of the protocluster. We suggest a possible scenario in which
the B2 ZAMS star driving the cavity has compressed the surrounding gas,
perturbed its properties and induced the star formation in its immediate
surroundings.Comment: 17 pages, 13 figures. Accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of
the Royal Astronomical Society (Main Journal
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