1,103 research outputs found
Massive molecular outflows at high spatial resolution
We present high-spatial resolution Plateau de Bure Interferometer CO(2-1) and
SiO(2-1) observations of one intermediate-mass and one high-mass star-forming
region. The intermediate-mass region IRAS20293+3952 exhibits four molecular
outflows, one being as collimated as the highly collimated jet-like outflows
observed in low-mass star formation sources. Furthermore, comparing the data
with additional infrared H2 and cm observations we see indications that the
nearby ultracompact HII region triggers a shock wave interacting with the
outflow. The high-mass region IRAS19217+1651 exhibits a bipolar outflow as well
and the region is dominated by the central driving source. Adding two more
sources from the literature, we compare position-velocity diagrams of the
intermediate- to high-mass sources with previous studies in the low-mass
regime. We find similar kinematic signatures, some sources can be explained by
jet-driven outflows whereas other are better constrained by wind-driven models.
The data also allow to estimate accretion rates varying from a few times
10^{-5}Msun/yr for the intermediate-mass sources to a few times 10^{-4}Msun/yr
for the high-mass source, consistent with models explaining star formation of
all masses via accretion processes.Comment: 14 pages text, 4 tables, 8 figures, accepted for Ap
Dust emission from young outflows: the case of L1157
We present new high-sensitivity 1.3 mm bolometer observations of the young
outflow L1157. These data show that the continuum emission arises from four
distinct components: a circumstellar disk, a protostellar envelope, an extended
flattened envelope --the dense remnant of the molecular cloud in which the
protostar was formed--, and the outflow itself, which represents ~20% of the
total flux. The outflow emission exhibits two peaks that are coincident with
the two strong shocks in the southern lobe of L1157. We show that the mm
continuum is dominated by thermal dust emission arising in the high velocity
material. The spectral index derived from the new 1.3 mm data and 850 mu
observations from Shirley et al. (2000), is ~5 in the outflow, significantly
higher than in the protostellar envelope (~3.5). This can be explained by an
important line contamination of the 850 mu map, and/or by different dust
characteristics in the two regions, possibly smaller grains in the post-shocks
regions of the outflow. Our observations show that bipolar outflows can present
compact emission peaks which must not be misinterpreted as protostellar
condensations when mapping star forming regions
Interferometric Detection of Planets/Gaps in Protoplanetary Disks
We investigate the possibility to find evidence for planets in circumstellar
disks by infrared and submillimeter interferometry. Hydrodynamical simulations
of a circumstellar disk around a solar-type star with an embedded planet of 1
Jupiter mass are presented. On the basis of 3D radiative transfer simulations,
images of this system are calculated. These intensity maps provide the basis
for the simulation of the interferometers VLTI (equipped with the mid-infrared
instrument MIDI) and ALMA. While ALMA will provide the necessary basis for a
direct gap and therefore indirect planet detection, MIDI/VLTI will provide the
possibility to distinguish between disks with or without accretion on the
central star on the basis of visibility measurements.Comment: 4 pages, TeX (or Latex, etc); to appear in proceedings of "Scientific
Frontiers in Research on Extrasolar Planets
How Hot is the Wind from TW Hydrae?
It has recently been suggested that the winds from Classical T Tauri stars in
general, and the wind from TW Hya in particular, reaches temperatures of at
least 300,000 K while maintaing a mass loss rate of \Msol
yr or larger. If confirmed, this would place strong new requirements on
wind launching and heating models. We therefore re-examine spectra from the
Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph aboard the Hubble Space Telescope and
spectra from the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer satellite in an effort
to better constrain the maximum temperature in the wind of TW Hya. We find
clear evidence for a wind in the \ion{C}{2} doublet at 1037 \AA and in the
\ion{C}{2} multiplet at 1335 \AA. We find no wind absorption in the \ion{C}{4}
1550 \AA doublet observed at the same time as the \ion{C}{2} 1335 \AA line or
in observations of \ion{O}{6} observed simultaneously with the \ion{C}{2} 1037
\AA line. The presence or absence of \ion{C}{3} wind absorption is ambiguous.
The clear lack of a wind in the \ion{C}{4} line argues that the wind from TW
Hya does not reach the 100,000 K characteristic formation temperature of this
line. We therefore argue that the available evidence suggests that the wind
from TW Hya, and probably all classical T Tauri stars, reaches a maximum
temperature in the range of 10,000 -- 30,000 K.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figures, Figure 1 in 2nd version fixes a small velocity
scaling error and new revision adds a reference to an additional paper
recently foun
Submillimeter CO emission from shock-heated gas in the L1157 outflow
We present the CO J=6-5, 4-3, and 3-2 spectra from the blueshifted gas of the
outflow driven by the low-mass class 0 protostar in the L1157 dark cloud.
Strong submillimeter CO emission lines with T_mb > 30 K have been detected at
63" (~0.13 pc) south from the protostar. It is remarkable that the blue wings
in the submillimeter lines are stronger by a factor of 3-4 than that of the CO
J=1-0 emission line. The CO line ratios suggest that the blueshifted lobe of
this outflow consists of moderately dense gas of n(H_2) = (1-3)x10^4 cm^-3
heated to T_kin = 50-170 K.It is also suggested that the kinetic temperature of
the outflowing gas increases from ~80 K near the protostar to ~170 K at the
shocked region in the lobe center, toward which the largest velocity dispersion
of the CO emission is observed. A remarkable correlation between the kinetic
temperature and velocity dispersion of the CO emission along the lobe provides
us with direct evidence that the molecular gas at the head of the jet-driven
bow shock is indeed heated kinematically. The lower temperature of ~80 K
measured at the other shocked region near the end of the lobe is explained if
this shock is in a later evolutionary stage, in which the gas has been cooled
mainly through radiation of the CO rotational lines.Comment: 10 pages, 4 PDF figures, APJL in pres
Detecting planets in protoplanetary disks: A prospective study
We investigate the possibility to find evidence for planets in circumstellar
disks by infrared and submillimeter interferometry. We present simulations of a
circumstellar disk around a solar-type star with an embedded planet of 1
Jupiter mass. The three-dimensional (3D) density structure of the disk results
from hydrodynamical simulations. On the basis of 3D radiative transfer
simulations, images of this system were calculated. The intensity maps provide
the basis for the simulation of the interferometers VLTI (equipped with the
mid-infrared instrument MIDI) and ALMA. While MIDI/VLTI will not provide the
possibility to distinguish between disks with or without a gap on the basis of
visibility measurements, ALMA will provide the necessary basis for a direct gap
detection.Comment: 5 page
The clumpy structure of the chemically active L1157 outflow
We present high spatial resolution maps, obtained with the Plateau de Bure
Interferometer, of the blue lobe of the L1157 outflow. We observed four lines
at 3 mm, namely CH3OH (2_K-1_K), HC3N (11-10), HCN (1-0) and OCS (7-6).
Moreover, the bright B1 clump has also been observed at better spatial
resolution in CS (2-1), CH3OH (2_1-1_1)A-, and 34SO (3_2-2_1). These high
spatial resolution observations show a very rich structure in all the tracers,
revealing a clumpy structure of the gas superimposed to an extended emission.
In fact, the three clumps detected by previous IRAM-30m single dish
observations have been resolved into several sub-clumps and new clumps have
been detected in the outflow. The clumps are associated with the two cavities
created by two shock episodes driven by the precessing jet. In particular, the
clumps nearest the protostar are located at the walls of the younger cavity
with a clear arch-shape form while the farthest clumps have slightly different
observational characteristics indicating that they are associated to the older
shock episode. The emission of the observed species peaks in different part of
the lobe: the east clumps are brighter in HC3N (11-10), HCN (1-0) and CS (2-1)
while the west clumps are brighter in CH3OH(2_K-1_K), OCS (7-6) and 34SO
(3_2-2_1). This peak displacement in the line emission suggests a variation of
the physical conditions and/or the chemical composition along the lobe of the
outflow at small scale, likely related to the shock activity and the precession
of the outflow. In particular, we observe the decoupling of the silicon
monoxide and methanol emission, common shock tracers, in the B1 clump located
at the apex of the bow shock produced by the second shock episode.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in the MNRA
IRAS 05358+3543: Multiple outflows at the earliest stages of massive star formation
We present a high-angular-resolution molecular line and millimeter continuum
study of the massive star formation site IRAS 05358+3543. The most remarkable
feature is a highly collimated (collimation factor ~10) and massive (>10 M_sun)
bipolar outflow of 1 pc length, which is part of a quadrupolar outflow system.
The three observed molecular outflows forming the IRAS 05358+3543 outflow
system resemble, in structure and collimation, those typical of low-mass
star-forming regions. They might therefore, just like low-mass outflows, be
explained by shock entrainment models of jets. We estimate a mass accretion
rate of 10^{-4) M_sun/yr, sufficient to overcome the radiative pressure of the
central object and to build up a massive star, lending further support to the
hypothesis that massive star formation occurs similarly to low-mass star
formation, only with higher accretion rates and energetics.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, accepted for Astronomy and Astrophysic
Infall and Outflow around the HH 212 protostellar system
HH 212 is a highly collimated jet discovered in H2 powered by a young Class 0
source, IRAS 05413-0104, in the L1630 cloud of Orion. We have mapped around it
in 1.33 mm continuum, 12CO (), 13CO (), C18O (), and SO
() emission at \arcs{2.5} resolution with the
Submillimeter Array. A dust core is seen in the continuum around the source. A
flattened envelope is seen in C18O around the source in the equator
perpendicular to the jet axis, with its inner part seen in 13CO. The structure
and kinematics of the envelope can be roughly reproduced by a simple edge-on
disk model with both infall and rotation. In this model, the density of the
disk is assumed to have a power-law index of or -2, as found in other
low-mass envelopes. The envelope seems dynamically infalling toward the source
with slow rotation because the kinematics is found to be roughly consistent
with a free fall toward the source plus a rotation of a constant specific
angular momentum. A 12CO outflow is seen surrounding the H2 jet, with a narrow
waist around the source. Jetlike structures are also seen in 12CO near the
source aligned with the H2 jet at high velocities. The morphological
relationship between the H2 jet and the 12CO outflow, and the kinematics of the
12CO outflow along the jet axis are both consistent with those seen in a
jet-driven bow shock model. SO emission is seen around the source and the H2
knotty shocks in the south, tracing shocked emission around them.Comment: 17 pages, 11 figures, Accepted by the Ap
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