332 research outputs found
Gas dynamics in Massive Dense Cores in Cygnus-X
We study the kinematic properties of dense gas surrounding massive protostars
recognized by Bontemps et a. (2010) in a sample of five Massive Dense Cores in
Cygnus-X. We investigate whether turbulent support plays a major role in
stabilizing the core against fragmentation into Jeans-mass objects or
alternatively, the observed kinematics could indicate a high level of dynamics.
We present IRAM 30m single-dish (HCO+ and H13CO+) and IRAM PdBI high
angular-resolution observations of dense gas tracers (H13CO+ and H13CN) to
reveal the kinematics of molecular gas at scales from 0.03 to 0.1 pc. Radiative
transfer modeling shows that H13CO+ is depleted within the envelopes of massive
protostars and traces the bulk of material surrounding the protostars rather
than their inner envelopes. H13CN shows a better correspondence with the peak
of the continuum emission, possibly due to abundance anomalies and specific
chemistry in the close vicinity of massive protostars. Analyzing the
line-widths we show that the observed line-dispersion of H13CO+ at the scale of
MDCs is smaller than expected from the quasi-static, turbulent-core model. At
large-scales, global organized bulk motions are identified for 3 of the MDCs.
At small-scales, several spectral components are identified in all MDCs showing
filamentary structures and intrinsic velocity gradients towards the continuum
peaks. The dynamics of these flows show diversity among the sample and we link
this to the specific fragmentation properties of the MDCs. No clear evidence is
found for a turbulence regulated, equilibrium scenario within the sample of
MDCs. We propose a picture in which MDCs are not in equilibrium and their
dynamics is governed by small-scale converging flows, which may initiate
star-formation via their shears
Cold CO gas in the envelopes of FU Orionis-type young eruptive stars
FUors are young stellar objects experiencing large optical outbursts due to
highly enhanced accretion from the circumstellar disk onto the star. FUors are
often surrounded by massive envelopes, which play a significant role in the
outburst mechanism. Conversely, the subsequent eruptions might gradually clear
up the obscuring envelope material and drive the protostar on its way to become
a disk-only T Tauri star. Here we present an APEX CO and CO
survey of eight southern and equatorial FUors. We measure the mass of the
gaseous material surrounding our targets. We locate the source of the CO
emission and derive physical parameters for the envelopes and outflows, where
detected. Our results support the evolutionary scenario where FUors represent a
transition phase from envelope-surrounded protostars to classical T Tauri
stars.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in the Ap
SiO excitation from dense shocks in the earliest stages of massive star formation
Molecular outflows are a direct consequence of accretion, and therefore they
represent one of the best tracers of accretion processes in the still poorly
understood early phases of high-mass star formation. Previous studies suggested
that the SiO abundance decreases with the evolution of a massive young stellar
object probably because of a decay of jet activity, as witnessed in low-mass
star-forming regions. We investigate the SiO excitation conditions and its
abundance in outflows from a sample of massive young stellar objects through
observations of the SiO(8-7) and CO(4-3) lines with the APEX telescope. Through
a non-LTE analysis, we find that the excitation conditions of SiO increase with
the velocity of the emitting gas. We also compute the SiO abundance through the
SiO and CO integrated intensities at high velocities. For the sources in our
sample we find no significant variation of the SiO abundance with evolution for
a bolometric luminosity-to-mass ratio of between 4 and 50 . We
also find a weak increase of the SiO(8-7) luminosity with the bolometric
luminosity-to-mass ratio. We speculate that this might be explained with an
increase of density in the gas traced by SiO. We find that the densities
constrained by the SiO observations require the use of shock models that
include grain-grain processing. For the first time, such models are compared
and found to be compatible with SiO observations. A pre-shock density of
cm is globally inferred from these comparisons. Shocks with a
velocity higher than 25 km s are invoked for the objects in our sample
where the SiO is observed with a corresponding velocity dispersion. Our
comparison of shock models with observations suggests that sputtering of
silicon-bearing material (corresponding to less than 10% of the total silicon
abundance) from the grain mantles is occurring.Comment: Accepted for publication by A&
First detection of CF+ towards a high-mass protostar
We report the first detection of the J = 1 - 0 (102.6 GHz) rotational lines
of CF+ (fluoromethylidynium ion) towards CygX-N63, a young and massive
protostar of the Cygnus X region. This detection occurred as part of an
unbiased spectral survey of this object in the 0.8-3 mm range, performed with
the IRAM 30m telescope. The data were analyzed using a local thermodynamical
equilibrium model (LTE model) and a population diagram in order to derive the
column density. The line velocity (-4 km s-1) and line width (1.6 km s-1)
indicate an origin from the collapsing envelope of the protostar.
We obtain a CF+ column density of 4.10e11 cm-2. The CF+ ion is thought to be
a good tracer for C+ and assuming a ratio of 10e-6 for CF+/C+, we derive a
total number of C+ of 1.2x10e53 within the beam. There is no evidence of carbon
ionization caused by an exterior source of UV photons suggesting that the
protostar itself is the source of ionization. Ionization from the protostellar
photosphere is not efficient enough. In contrast, X-ray ionization from the
accretion shock(s) and UV ionization from outflow shocks could provide a large
enough ionizing power to explain our CF+ detection.
Surprisingly, CF+ has been detected towards a cold, massive protostar with no
sign of an external photon dissociation region (PDR), which means that the only
possibility is the existence of a significant inner source of C+. This is an
important result that opens interesting perspectives to study the early
development of ionized regions and to approach the issue of the evolution of
the inner regions of collapsing envelopes of massive protostars. The existence
of high energy radiations early in the evolution of massive protostars also has
important implications for chemical evolution of dense collapsing gas and could
trigger peculiar chemistry and early formation of a hot core.Comment: 6 page
Understanding star formation in molecular clouds I. Effects of line-of-sight contamination on the column density structure
Column-density maps of molecular clouds are one of the most important
observables in the context of molecular cloud- and star-formation (SF) studies.
With the Herschel satellite it is now possible to determine the column density
from dust emission. We use observations and simulations to demonstrate how LOS
contamination affects the column density probability distribution function
(PDF). We apply a first-order approximation (removing a constant level) to the
molecular clouds of Auriga, Maddalena, Carina and NGC3603. In perfect agreement
with the simulations, we find that the PDFs become broader, the peak shifts to
lower column densities, and the power-law tail of the PDF flattens after
correction. All PDFs have a lognormal part for low column densities with a peak
at Av~2, a deviation point (DP) from the lognormal at Av(DP)~4-5, and a
power-law tail for higher column densities. Assuming a density distribution
rho~r^-alpha, the slopes of the power-law tails correspond to alpha(PDF)=1.8,
1.75, and 2.5 for Auriga, Carina, and NGC3603 (alpha~1.5-2 is consistent
gravitational collapse). We find that low-mass and high-mass SF clouds display
differences in the overall column density structure. Massive clouds assemble
more gas in smaller cloud volumes than low-mass SF ones. However, for both
cloud types, the transition of the PDF from lognormal shape into power-law tail
is found at the same column density (at Av~4-5 mag). Low-mass and high-mass SF
clouds then have the same low column density distribution, most likely
dominated by supersonic turbulence. At higher column densities, collapse and
external pressure can form the power-law tail. The relative importance of the
two processes can vary between clouds and thus lead to the observed differences
in PDF and column density structure.Comment: A&A accepted, 15.12. 201
Sedigism: Structure, Excitation, And Dynamics Of The Inner Galactic Interstellar Medium
The origin and life-cycle of molecular clouds are still poorly constrained, despite their importance for understanding the evolution of the interstellar medium. Many large-scale surveys of the Galactic plane have been conducted recently, allowing for rapid progress in this field. Nevertheless, a sub-arcminute resolution global view of the large-scale distribution of molecular gas, from the diffuse medium to dense clouds and clumps, and of their relationshipto the spiral structure, is still missing
Water emission from the high-mass star-forming region IRAS 17233-3606. High water abundances at high velocities
We investigate the physical and chemical processes at work during the
formation of a massive protostar based on the observation of water in an
outflow from a very young object previously detected in H2 and SiO in the IRAS
17233-3606 region. We estimated the abundance of water to understand its
chemistry, and to constrain the mass of the emitting outflow. We present new
observations of shocked water obtained with the HIFI receiver onboard Herschel.
We detected water at high velocities in a range similar to SiO. We
self-consistently fitted these observations along with previous SiO data
through a state-of-the-art, one-dimensional, stationary C-shock model. We found
that a single model can explain the SiO and H2O emission in the red and blue
wings of the spectra. Remarkably, one common area, similar to that found for H2
emission, fits both the SiO and H2O emission regions. This shock model
subsequently allowed us to assess the shocked water column density,
N(H2O)=1.2x10^{18} cm^{-2}, mass, M(H2O)=12.5 M_earth, and its maximum
fractional abundance with respect to the total density, x(H2O)=1.4x10^{-4}. The
corresponding water abundance in fractional column density units ranges between
2.5x10^{-5} and 1.2x10^{-5}, in agreement with recent results obtained in
outflows from low- and high-mass young stellar objects.Comment: accepted for publication as a Letter in Astronomy and Astrophysic
ATLASGAL - environments of 6.7 GHz methanol masers
Using the 870 micron APEX Telescope large area survey of the Galaxy, we have identified 577 submillimetre continuum sources with masers from the methanol multibeam survey in the region 280deg lt ell lt 20deg; |b| lt 1deg.5 94 per cent of methanol masers in the region are associated with submillimetre dust emission. We estimate masses for tilde450 maser-associated sources and find that methanol masers are preferentially associated with massive clumps. These clumps are centrally condensed, with envelope structures that appear to be scale-free, the mean maser position being offset from the peak column density by 0 plusmn 4 arcsec. Assuming a Kroupa initial mass function and a star formation efficiency of tilde30 per cent, we find that over two-thirds of the clumps are likely to form clusters with masses gt20 M. Furthermore, almost all clumps satisfy the empirical mass-size criterion for massive star formation. Bolometric luminosities taken from the literature for tilde100 clumps range between tilde100 and 10 L. This confirms the link between methanol masers and massive young stars for 90 per cent of our sample. The Galactic distribution of sources suggests that the star formation efficiency is significantly reduced in the Galactic Centre region, compared to the rest of the survey area, where it is broadly constant, and shows a significant drop in the massive star formation rate density in the outer Galaxy. We find no enhancement in source counts towards the southern Scutum-Centaurus arm tangent at ell tilde 315deg, which suggests that this arm is not actively forming stars.Peer reviewe
Mass transport from the envelope to the disk of V346 Nor: a case study for the luminosity problem in an FUor-type young eruptive star
A long-standing open issue of the paradigm of low-mass star formation is the
luminosity problem: most protostars are less luminous than theoretically
predicted. One possible solution is that the accretion process is episodic. FU
Ori-type stars (FUors) are thought to be the visible examples for objects in
the high accretion state. FUors are often surrounded by massive envelopes,
which replenish the disk material and enable the disk to produce accretion
outbursts. However, we have insufficient information on the envelope dynamics
in FUors, about where and how mass transfer from the envelope to the disk
happens. Here we present ALMA observations of the FUor-type star V346 Nor at
1.3 mm continuum and in different CO rotational lines. We mapped the density
and velocity structure of its envelope and analyze the results using channel
maps, position-velocity diagrams, and spectro-astrometric methods. We found
that V346 Nor is surrounded by gaseous material on 10000 au scale in which a
prominent outflow cavity is carved. Within the central 700 au, the
circumstellar matter forms a flattened pseudo-disk where material is infalling
with conserved angular momentum. Within 350 au, the velocity profile is
more consistent with a disk in Keplerian rotation around a central star of 0.1
. We determined an infall rate from the envelope onto the disk of
610yr, a factor of few higher than the
quiescent accretion rate from the disk onto the star, hinting for a mismatch
between the infall and accretion rates as the cause of the eruption.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures, published in Ap
ATLASGAL-selected massive clumps in the inner Galaxy: I. CO depletion and isotopic ratios
In the low-mass regime, it is found that the gas-phase abundances of
C-bearing molecules in cold starless cores rapidly decrease with increasing
density, as the molecules form mantles on dust grains. We study CO depletion in
102 massive clumps selected from the ATLASGAL 870 micron survey, and
investigate its correlation with evolutionary stage and with the physical
parameters of the sources. Moreover, we study the gradients in [12C]/[13C] and
[18O]/[17O] isotopic ratios across the inner Galaxy, and the virial stability
of the clumps. We use low-J emission lines of CO isotopologues and the dust
continuum emission to infer the depletion factor fD. RATRAN one-dimensional
models were also used to determine fD and to investigate the presence of
depletion above a density threshold. The isotopic ratios and optical depth were
derived with a Bayesian approach. We find a significant number of clumps with a
large fD, up to ~20. Larger values are found for colder clumps, thus for
earlier evolutionary phases. For massive clumps in the earliest stages of
evolution we estimate the radius of the region where CO depletion is important
to be a few tenths of a pc. Clumps are found with total masses derived from
dust continuum emission up to ~20 times higher than the virial mass, especially
among the less evolved sources. These large values may in part be explained by
the presence of depletion: if the CO emission comes mainly from the low-density
outer layers, the molecules may be subthermally excited, leading to an
overestimate of the dust masses. CO depletion in high-mass clumps seems to
behave as in the low-mass regime, with less evolved clumps showing larger
values for the depletion than their more evolved counterparts, and increasing
for denser sources. The C and O isotopic ratios are consistent with previous
determinations, and show a large intrinsic scatter.Comment: 20 pages, 17 figures, 38 pages of online material (tables and
figures
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