1,772 research outputs found
The kinematics of molecular clumps surrounding hot cores in G29.96-0.02 and G31.41+0.31
We present high angular resolution interferometric observations of the 3 and
1.3mm continuum emission, and HCO+(1-0) and SiO(2-1)v=0 lines, obtained with
the Owens Valley Radio Observatory millimeter-wave array, toward two hot cores
(HCs) associated with two well known ultracompact (UC) HII regions: G29.96-0.02
and G31.41+0.31. These HCs are believed to host young forming massive stars
which have been suggested to be surrounded by massive rotating accretion disks.
The aim of these new observations is to study the structure and kinematics of
the molecular clumps surrounding the HCs and nearby UCHII regions at moderately
high angular resolution. Our observations reveal that the clumps within which
the HCs and UCHII regions are embedded have a complex kinematical structure.
The total mass of the clumps is estimated to be in the range 1000-3000 Msun,
consistent with previous findings. Our observations also show compelling
evidence that the clump in G29.96-0.02 is contracting onto the HC position,
suggesting that the accretion process onto the massive young stellar object
embedded in the HC is still ongoing. In these objects the kinematical structure
that we observe is also compatible with the presence of a massive rotating disk
within the HC, even though we cannot prove this suggestion with our data. The
case of G31.41+0.31 is more complicated, and our data, although consistent with
the presence of an inner disk and an infalling envelope around it, do not have
the required spatial resolution to resolve the different structures.Comment: 13 pages, 15 figs, A&A in pres
Water masers in the massive protostar IRAS 20126+4104: ejection and deceleration
We report on the first multi-epoch, phase referenced VLBI observations of the
water maser emission in a high-mass protostar associated with a disk-jet
system. The source under study, IRAS 20126+4104, has been extensively
investigated in a large variety of tracers, including water maser VLBA data
acquired by us three years before the present observations. The new findings
fully confirm the interpretation proposed in our previous study, namely that
the maser spots are expanding from a common origin coincident with the
protostar. We also demonstrate that the observed 3-D velocities of the maser
spots can be fitted with a model assuming that the spots are moving along the
surface of a conical jet, with speed increasing for increasing distance from
the cone vertex. We also present the results of single-dish monitoring of the
water maser spectra in IRAS 20126+4104. These reveal that the peak velocity of
some maser lines decreases linearly with time. We speculate that such a
deceleration could be due to braking of the shocks from which the maser
emission originates, due to mass loading at the shock front or dissipation of
the shock energy.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in A&
Front propagation in geometric and phase field models of stratified media
We study front propagation problems for forced mean curvature flows and their
phase field variants that take place in stratified media, i.e., heterogeneous
media whose characteristics do not vary in one direction. We consider phase
change fronts in infinite cylinders whose axis coincides with the symmetry axis
of the medium. Using the recently developed variational approaches, we provide
a convergence result relating asymptotic in time front propagation in the
diffuse interface case to that in the sharp interface case, for suitably
balanced nonlinearities of Allen-Cahn type. The result is established by using
arguments in the spirit of -convergence, to obtain a correspondence
between the minimizers of an exponentially weighted Ginzburg-Landau type
functional and the minimizers of an exponentially weighted area type
functional. These minimizers yield the fastest traveling waves invading a given
stable equilibrium in the respective models and determine the asymptotic
propagation speeds for front-like initial data. We further show that
generically these fronts are the exponentially stable global attractors for
this kind of initial data and give sufficient conditions under which complete
phase change occurs via the formation of the considered fronts
Dissecting a hot molecular core: The case of G31.41+0.31
We made a detailed observational analysis of a well known hot molecular core
lying in the high-mass star-forming region G31.41+0.31. This core is believed
to contain deeply embedded massive stars and presents a velocity gradient that
has been interpreted either as rotation or as expansion, depending on the
authors. Our aim was to shed light on this question and possibly prepare the
ground for higher resolution ALMA observations which could directly detect
circumstellar disks around the embedded massive stars. Observations at
sub-arcsecond resolution were performed with the Submillimeter Array in methyl
cyanide, a typical hot molecular core tracer, and 12CO and 13CO, well known
outflow tracers. We also obtained sensitive continuum maps at 1.3 mm. Our
findings confirm the existence of a sharp velocity gradient across the core,
but cannot confirm the existence of a bipolar outflow perpendicular to it. The
improved angular resolution and sampling of the uv plane allow us to attain
higher quality channel maps of the CH3CN lines with respect to previous studies
and thus significantly improve our knowledge of the structure and kinematics of
the hot molecular core. While no conclusive argument can rule out any of the
two interpretations (rotation or expansion) proposed to explain the velocity
gradient observed in the core, in our opinion the observational evidence
collected so far indicates the rotating toroid as the most likely scenario. The
outflow hypothesis appears less plausible, because the dynamical time scale is
too short compared to that needed to form species such as CH3CN, and the mass
loss and momentum rates estimated from our measurements appear too high.Comment: Astronomy and Astrophysics, in pres
Kinematics of a hot massive accretion disk candidate
Characterizing rotation, infall and accretion disks around high-mass
protostars is an important topic in massive star formation research. With the
Australia Telescope Compact Array and the Very Large Array we studied a massive
disk candidate at high angular resolution in ammonia (NH3(4,4) & (5,5)) tracing
the warm disk but not the envelope. The observations resolved at ~0.4''
resolution (corresponding to ~1400AU) a velocity gradient indicative of
rotation perpendicular to the molecular outflow. Assuming a Keplerian accretion
disk, the estimated protostar-disk mass would be high, similar to the
protostellar mass. Furthermore, the position-velocity diagram exhibits
additional deviation from a Keplerian rotation profile which may be caused by
infalling gas and/or a self-gravitating disk. Moreover, a large fraction of the
rotating gas is at temperatures >100K, markedly different to typical low-mass
accretion disks. In addition, we resolve a central double-lobe cm continuum
structure perpendicular to the rotation. We identify this with an ionized,
optically thick jet.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted for Astrophysical Journal Letters, a
high-resolution version of the draft can be found at
http://www.mpia.de/homes/beuther/papers.htm
Interferometric mapping of Magnetic fields: G30.79 FIR 10
We present polarization maps of G30.79 FIR 10 (in W43) from thermal dust
emission at 1.3 mm and from CO J= line emission. The observations were
obtained using the Berkeley-Illinois-Maryland Association array in the period
2002-2004. The G30.79 FIR 10 region shows an ordered polarization pattern in
dust emission, which suggests an hourglass shape for the magnetic field. Only
marginal detections for line polarization were made from this region.
Application of the Chandrashkar-Fermi method yielded mG
and a statistically corrected mass to magnetic flux ratio , or essentially critical.Comment: 11 pages, 2 Figures, Published in Ap
Infall of gas as the formation mechanism of stars up to 20 times more massive than the Sun
Theory predicts and observations confirm that low-mass stars (like the Sun)
in their early life grow by accreting gas from the surrounding material. But
for stars ~ 10 times more massive than the Sun (~10 M_sun), the powerful
stellar radiation is expected to inhibit accretion and thus limit the growth of
their mass. Clearly, stars with masses >10 M_sun exist, so there must be a way
for them to form. The problem may be solved by non-spherical accretion, which
allows some of the stellar photons to escape along the symmetry axis where the
density is lower. The recent detection of rotating disks and toroids around
very young massive stars has lent support to the idea that high-mass (> 8
M_sun) stars could form in this way. Here we report observations of an ammonia
line towards a high-mass star forming region. We conclude from the data that
the gas is falling inwards towards a very young star of ~20 M_sun, in line with
theoretical predictions of non-spherical accretion.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figure
One-dimensional multi-agent optimal control with aggregation and distance constraints: Qualitative properties and mean-field limit
In this paper we consider an optimal control problem for a large population of interacting agents with deterministic dynamics, aggregating potential and constraints on reciprocal distances, in dimension 1. We study existence and qualitative properties of periodic in time optimal trajectories of the finite agents optimal control problem, with particular interest on the compactness of the solutions' support and on the saturation of the distance constraint. Moreover, we prove, through a \u393-convergence result, the consistency of the mean-field optimal control problemwith density constraintswith the corresponding underlying finite agent one and we deduce some qualitative results for the time periodic equilibria of the limit problem
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