209 research outputs found
Water in massive star-forming regions: HIFI observations of W3 IRS5
We present Herschel observations of the water molecule in the massive star-forming region W3 IRS5. The o-H_(2)^(17)O 1_(10)-1_(01), p-H_(2_^(18)O 1_(11)-0_(00), p-H_(2)O 2_(02)-1_(11), p-H_(2)O 1_(11)-0_(00), o-H_(2)O 2_(21)-2_(12), and o-H_(2)O 2_(12)-1_(01) lines, covering a frequency range from 552 up to 1669 GHz, have been detected at high spectral resolution with HIFI. The water lines in W3 IRS5 show well-defined high-velocity wings that indicate a clear contribution by outflows. Moreover, the systematically blue-shifted absorption in the H_(2)_O lines suggests expansion, presumably driven by the outflow. No infall signatures are detected. The p-H_(2)O 1_(11)-0_(00) and o-H_(2)O 2_(12)-1_(01) lines show absorption from the cold material (T ~ 10 K) in which the high-mass protostellar envelope is embedded. One-dimensional radiative transfer models are used to estimate water abundances and to further study the kinematics of the region. We show that the emission in the rare isotopologues comes directly from the inner parts of the envelope (T ≳ 100 K) where water ices in the dust mantles evaporate and the gas-phase abundance increases. The resulting jump in the water abundance (with a constant inner abundance of 10^(-4)) is needed to reproduce the o-H_(2)^(17)O 1_(10)-1_(01) and p-H_(2)^(18)O 1_(11)-0_(00) spectra in our models. We estimate water abundances of 10^(-8) to 10^(-9) in the outer parts of the envelope (T ≲ 100 K). The possibility of two protostellar objects contributing to the emission is discussed
A multiwavelength study of embedded clusters in W5-east, NGC 7538, S235, S252 and S254-S258
articleWe present Spitzer, near-IR (NIR) and millimetre observations of the massive star-forming regions W5-east, S235, S252, S254-S258 and NGC 7538. Spitzer data is combined with NIR observations to identify and classify the young population while 12CO and 13CO observations are used to examine the parental molecular cloud. We detect in total 3021 young stellar objects (YSOs). Of those, 539 are classified as Class I, and 1186 as Class II sources. YSOs are distributed in groups surrounded by a more scattered population. Class I sources are more hierarchically organized than Class II and associated with the most dense molecular material. We identify in total 41 embedded clusters containing between 52 and 73 per cent of the YSOs. Clusters are in general non-virialized, turbulent and have star formation efficiencies between 5 and 50 per cent. We compare the physical properties of embedded clusters harbouring massive stars (MEC) and low-mass embedded clusters (LEC) and find that both groups follow similar correlations where the MEC are an extrapolation of the LEC. The mean separation between MEC members is smaller compared to the cluster Jeans length than for LEC members. These results are in agreement with a scenario where stars are formed in hierarchically distributed dusty filaments where fragmentation is mainly driven by turbulence for the more massive clusters. We find several young OB-type stars having IR-excess emission which may be due to the presence of an accretion disc.This work is based in part on observations made with the Spitzer
Space Telescope, which is operated by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
Caltech, under a contract with NASA. Support for this work
was provided by NASA through a contract issued by JPL/Caltech.
We also thank NOAO for their student thesis support. The Five College
Radio Astronomy Observatory was supported by NSF grant
AST 0540852. CB is supported by an RCUK Fellowship at the University
of Exeter, UK. This work is based in part on the IRAC postBCD
processing software ‘IRACPROC’ developed by Mike Schuster,
Massimo Marengo and Brian Patten at the Smithsonian Astrophysical
Observatory. This research used the facilities of the Canadian
Astronomy Data Centre operated by the National Research Council
of Canada with the support of the Canadian Space Agency. This research
has made use of the NASA/ IPAC Infrared Science Archive,
which is operated by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute
of Technology, under contract with the National Aeronautics
and Space Administration. We thank the Spanish MINECO
for funding support from grants CSD2009-00038, AYA2009-07304
and AYA2012-32032
Household stored water quality in an intermittent water supply network in Panama
Safe water storage is critical to preserve water quality, especially when intermittent piped drinking water supply creates a need for household storage. This study characterized household storage practices and stored water quality in 94 households (N = 94) among four peri-urban neighborhoods in Arraiján, Panama with varying degrees of supply intermittency. We found that 18 (19.1%) households stored drinking water in unsafe containers. Forty-four (47%) samples of household stored drinking water had residual chlorine levels 10 most probable number (MPN)/100 mL total coliform bacteria. Eight (44%) samples were positive for Escherichia coli, whereas only one (1.3%) sample from the safe containers was positive. Twenty-nine (30.9%) samples had >500 MPN/mL heterotrophic plate count bacteria. These findings suggest that longer supply interruptions were associated with longer storage times and lower chlorine residual, which were associated with higher concentrations of indicator bacteria. This is one of the first studies in the Central-American region to show an association between the lack of turnover (replacement with fresh water) and greater contamination during household water storage. Thus, when drinking water supply is not completely continuous and household storage is required, decreasing the time between supply periods can facilitate safer water storage. Public awareness and education are also recommended to increase hygiene practices during water collection and storage.Safe water storage is critical to preserve water quality, especially when intermittent piped drinking water supply creates a need for household storage. This study characterized household storage practices and stored water quality in 94 households (N = 94) among four peri-urban neighborhoods in Arraiján, Panama with varying degrees of supply intermittency. We found that 18 (19.1%) households stored drinking water in unsafe containers. Forty-four (47%) samples of household stored drinking water had residual chlorine levels 10 most probable number (MPN)/100 mL total coliform bacteria. Eight (44%) samples were positive for Escherichia coli, whereas only one (1.3%) sample from the safe containers was positive. Twenty-nine (30.9%) samples had >500 MPN/mL heterotrophic plate count bacteria. These findings suggest that longer supply interruptions were associated with longer storage times and lower chlorine residual, which were associated with higher concentrations of indicator bacteria. This is one of the first studies in the Central-American region to show an association between the lack of turnover (replacement with fresh water) and greater contamination during household water storage. Thus, when drinking water supply is not completely continuous and household storage is required, decreasing the time between supply periods can facilitate safer water storage. Public awareness and education are also recommended to increase hygiene practices during water collection and storage
Functional consequences of lead and mercury exposomes in the heart
Lead and mercury are heavy metals that are highly toxic to life forms. There are no known physiological processes that require them, and they do not have a particular threshold concentration to produce biologic damage. They are non-biodegradable, and they slowly accumulate in the environment in a dynamic equilibrium between air, water, soil, food, and living organisms. Their accumulation in the environment has been increasing over time, because they were not banned from use in anthropogenic industrial production. In their +2 cationic state they are powerful oxidizing agents with the ability to interfere significantly with processes that require specific divalent cations. Acute or chronic exposure to lead and mercury can produce multisystemic damage, especially in the developing nervous systems of children and fetuses, resulting in variety of neurological consequences. They can also affect the cardiovascular system and especially the heart, either directly through their action on cardiomyocytes or indirectly through their effects on innervation, humoral responses or blood vessel alterations. For example, heart function modified by these heavy metals are heart rate, contraction, excitability, and rhythm. Some cardiac molecular targets have been identified and characterized. The direct mechanisms of damage of these heavy metals on heart function are discussed. We conclude that exposome to these heavy metals, should be considered as a major relevant risk factor for cardiac diseases
Spitzer observations of the Massive star forming complex S254-S258: structure and evolution
We present Spitzer-IRAC, NOAO 2.1meter-Flamingos, Keck-NIRC, and
FCRAO-SEQUOIA observations of the massive star forming complex S254-S258,
covering an area of 25x20 arc-minutes. Using a combination of the IRAC and NIR
data, we identify and classify the young stellar objects (YSO) in the complex.
We detect 510 sources with near or mid IR-excess, and we classify 87 Class I,
and 165 Class II sources. The YSO are found in clusters surrounded by isolated
YSO in a low-density distributed population. The ratio of clustered to total
YSO is 0.8. We identify six new clusters in the complex. One of them,
G192.63-00, is located around the ionizing star of the HII region S255. We
hypothesize that the ionizing star of S255 was formed in this cluster. We also
detect a southern component of the cluster in HII region S256. The cluster
G192.54-0.15, located inside HII region S254 has a VLSR of 17 km/s with respect
to the main cloud, and we conclude that it is located in the background of the
complex. The structure of the molecular cloud is examined using 12CO and 13CO,
as well as a near-IR extinction map. The main body of the molecular cloud has
VLSR between 5 and 9 km/s. The arc-shaped structure of the molecular cloud,
following the border of the HII regions, and the high column density in the
border of the HII regions support the idea that the material has been swept up
by the expansion of the HII regions.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journa
The massive protostar W43-MM1 as seen by Herschel-HIFI water spectra: high turbulence and accretion luminosity
We present Herschel/HIFI observations of fourteen water lines in W43-MM1, a
massive protostellar object in the luminous star cluster-forming region W43. We
analyze the gas dynamics from the line profiles using Herschel-HIFI
observations (WISH-KP) of fourteen far-IR water lines (H2O, H217O, H218O),
CS(11-10), and C18O(9-8) lines, and using our modeling of the continuum
spectral energy distribution. As for lower mass protostellar objects, the
molecular line profiles are a mix of emission and absorption, and can be
decomposed into 'medium', and 'broad' velocity components. The broad component
is the outflow associated with protostars of all masses. Our modeling shows
that the remainder of the water profiles can be well fitted by an infalling and
passively heated envelope, with highly supersonic turbulence varying from 2.2
km/s in the inner region to 3.5 km/s in the outer envelope. Also, W43-MM1 has a
high accretion rate, between 4.0 x 10^{-4} and 4.0 x 10^{-2} \msun /yr, derived
from the fast (0.4-2.9 km/s) infall observed. We estimate a lower mass limit of
gaseous water of 0.11 \msun and total water luminosity of 1.5 \lsun (in the 14
lines presented here). The central hot core is detected with a water abundance
of 1.4 x 10^{-4} while the water abundance for the outer envelope is 8
x10^{-8}. The latter value is higher than in other sources, most likely related
to the high turbulence and the micro-shocks created by its dissipation.
Examining water lines of various energies, we find that the turbulent velocity
increases with the distance to the center. While not in clear disagreement with
the competitive accretion scenario, this behavior is predicted by the turbulent
core model. Moreover, the estimated accretion rate is high enough to overcome
the expected radiation pressure.Comment: Accepted in A&A on April 2, 2012. 12 pages 7 figure
Caracterización de condiciones agroecológicas y sociales en unidades de producción del sitio Ramsar Moyúa, Ciudad Darío, Matagalpa
El estudio se llevó a cabo en ocho unidades productivas del Sitio Ramsar Moyúa, el objetivo principal fue caracterizar agro socioeconómicamente y ambientalmente las unidades de producción, con la finalidad de coadyuvar en la recuperación o mantenimiento de la calidad de los suelos, agua y la sostenibilidad de los agroecosistemas y del medio circundante. Las variables medidas fueron: características sociales y económicas, condiciones agroecológicas, parámetros físicos y químicos del suelo, manejo agronómico y zootécnico. Entre los principales resultados del estudio se encontró que el manejo y explotación actual de las unidades de producción no mejoran la calidad de vida de los productores, Los recursos naturales están siendo afectados por las prácticas productivas como las quemas agrícolas, utilización de productos químicos y aumento del área agrícola, sin ningún impacto en la rentabilidad productiva. Las condiciones agroecológicas climatológicas como temperatura, horas luz, altura sobre el nivel del mar son las óptimas para el desarrollo de los cultivos que están establecidos excepto para la precipitación de 787 mm anual, siendo un factor de pérdidas de cosecha por sequías. La textura, pH, pedregosidad, profundidad, se encuentran en niveles adecuados, algunos macro y micro nutrientes están bajos para algunos casos debiéndose aplicar enmiendas, el manejo tanto agrícola como pecuario de las unidades de producción no es el indicado, se propusieron alternativas que permitan mejorar los rendimientos sin afectar los recursos naturales agua, suelo, aire y bosque los que deben conservarse para desarrollar la actividad turística sostenible por la cual es reconocido este sitio. Palabras clave: Características, agroecológicas, ambiental
Near-infrared spectroscopy in NGC 7538
The characterisation of the stellar population toward young high-mass
star-forming regions allows to constrain fundamental cluster properties like
distance and age. These are essential when using high-mass clusters as probes
to conduct Galactic studies. NGC 7538 is a star-forming region with an embedded
stellar population only unearthed in the near-infrared. We present the first
near-infrared spectro-photometric study of the candidate high-mass stellar
content in NGC 7538. We obtained H and K spectra of 21 sources with both the
multi-object and long-slit modes of LIRIS at the WHT, and complement these data
with sub-arcsecond JHKs photometry of the region using the imaging mode of the
same instrument. We find a wide variety of objects within the studied stellar
population of NGC 7538. Our results discriminate between a stellar population
associated to the HII region, but not contained within its extent, and several
pockets of more recent star formation. We report the detection of CO bandhead
emission toward several sources as well as other features indicative of a young
stellar nature. We infer a spectro-photometric distance of 2.7+-0.5 kpc, an age
spread in the range 0.5-2.2 Myr and a total mass ~1.7x10^3 Msun for the older
population.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, 1 table, accepted by A&
Water abundances in high-mass protostellar envelopes: Herschel observations with HIFI
We derive the dense core structure and the water abundance in four massive
star-forming regions which may help understand the earliest stages of massive
star formation. We present Herschel-HIFI observations of the para-H2O 1_11-0_00
and 2_02-1_11 and the para-H2-18O 1_11-0_00 transitions. The envelope
contribution to the line profiles is separated from contributions by outflows
and foreground clouds. The envelope contribution is modelled using Monte-Carlo
radiative transfer codes for dust and molecular lines (MC3D and RATRAN), with
the water abundance and the turbulent velocity width as free parameters. While
the outflows are mostly seen in emission in high-J lines, envelopes are seen in
absorption in ground-state lines, which are almost saturated. The derived water
abundances range from 5E-10 to 4E-8 in the outer envelopes. We detect cold
clouds surrounding the protostar envelope, thanks to the very high quality of
the Herschel-HIFI data and the unique ability of water to probe them. Several
foreground clouds are also detected along the line of sight. The low H2O
abundances in massive dense cores are in accordance with the expectation that
high densities and low temperatures lead to freeze-out of water on dust grains.
The spread in abundance values is not clearly linked to physical properties of
the sources.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication the 15/07/2010 by
Astronomy&Astrophysics as a letter in the Herschel-HIFI special issu
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