232 research outputs found
Fragmented molecular complexes: The role of the magnetic field in feeding internal supersonic motions
A hierarchical structure for molecular complexes in their cold phase i.e., preceeding the formation of massive stars, was derived from extensive large scale CO(13)(J=1=0) observations: the mass is found to be distributed into virialized clouds which fill only a very low fraction approx. 01 of the volume of the complex and are supported against gravity by internal supersonic motions. An efficient mechanism was found to transfer kinetic energy from the orbital motions of the clouds to their internal random motions. The large perturbations of the magnetic field induced at the cloud boundaries by their interactions with their neighbors generate systems of hydromagnetic waves trapped inside the clouds. The magnetic field lines being closely coupled to the gas at the densities which prevail in the bulk of the clouds volume, internal velocity dispersion is thus generated. Some conclusions derived from this data are given
Diffuse infrared emission of the galaxy: Large scale properties
The Infrared Astronomy Satellite (IRAS) survey is used to study large scale properties and the origin of the diffuse emission of the Galaxy. A careful subtraction of the zodiacal light enables longitude profiles of the galactic emission at 12, 25, 60, and 100 microns to be presented
Jeans criterion in a turbulent medium
According to the classical Jeans analysis, all the molecular clouds of mass larger than a few 100 M(solar), size larger than about 1pc and kinetic temperature Tk less than 30K are gravitationally unstable. We have shown that in clouds supported by internal supersonic motions, local gravitational instabilities may appear within molecular clouds which are globally stable. The argument is threefold: (1) when the turbulent kinetic energy is included into the internal energy term, the virial equilibrium condition shows that molecular clouds such as those observed, which are gravitationally unstable according to the Jeans criterion, are indeed globally stable if supported by a turbulent velocity field of power spectrum steeper than 3; (2) 2D compressible hydrodynamical simulations show that a supersonic turbulent velocity field generates a turbulent pressure within clouds, the gradients of which stabilize the unstable scales (i.e., the largest scales and the cloud itself) against gravitational collapse; (3) an analysis similar to the Jeans approach but including the turbulent pressure gradient term, gives basically the same results as those given in (1). Clouds of mean density lower than a critical value are found to be stable even though more massive than their Jeans mass. In clouds of mean density larger than that critical value, the gravitational instability appears only over a range of scales smaller than the cloud size, the largest scales being stable. In practice, the observed mean densities are lower than this critical value: the observation of a small number of cores and stars of a few solar masses embedded in clouds of several hundred solar masses can only be understood in terms of small scale density fluctuations of large amplitude generated by the supersonic turbulence which would occasionally overtake the limit of gravitational stability
High Mass Starless Cores
We report the identification of a sample of potential High-Mass Starless
Cores (HMSCs). The cores were discovered by comparing images of the fields
containing candidate High-Mass Protostellar Objects (HMPOs) at 1.2mm and
mid-infrared (8.3um; MIR) wavelengths. While the HMPOs are detected at both
wavelengths, several cores emitting at 1.2mm in the same fields show absorption
or no emission at the MIR wavelength. We argue that the absorption is caused by
cold dust. The estimated masses of a few 10^2Msun - 10^3 Msun and the lack of
IR emission suggests that they may be massive cold cores in a pre-stellar
phase, which could presumably form massive stars eventually. Ammonia (1,1) and
(2,2) observations of the cores indicate smaller velocity dispersions and lower
rotation temperatures compared to HMPOs and UCHII regions suggesting a
quiescent pre-stellar stage. We propose that these newly discovered cores are
good candidates for the HMSC stage in high-mass star-formation. This sample of
cores will allow us to study the high-mass star and cluster formation processes
at the earliest evolutionary stages.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, 1 table, to be published in ApJL, author names
replaced with comma separatio
A Molecular Line Observation toward Massive Clumps Associated with Infrared Dark Clouds
We have surveyed the N2H+ J=1-0, HC3N J=5-4, CCS J_N=4_3-3_2, NH3 (J, K) =
(1, 1), (2, 2), (3, 3), and CH3OH J=7-6 lines toward the 55 massive clumps
associated with infrared dark clouds by using the Nobeyama Radio Observatory 45
m telescope and the Atacama Submillimeter Telescope Experiment 10 m telescope.
The N2H+, HC3N, and NH3 lines are detected toward most of the objects. On the
other hand, the CCS emission is detected toward none of the objects. The
[CCS]/[N2H+] ratios are found to be mostly lower than unity even in the Spitzer
24 micron dark objects. This suggests that most of the massive clumps are
chemically more evolved than the low-mass starless cores. The CH3OH emission is
detected toward 18 out of 55 objects. All the CH3OH-detected objects are
associated with the Spitzer 24 micron sources, suggesting that star formation
has already started in all the CH3OH-detected objects. The velocity widths of
the CH3OH J_K=7_0-6_0 A+ and 7_{-1}-6_{-1} E lines are broader than those of
N2H+ J=1-0. The CH3OH J_K=7_0-6_0 A+ and 7_{-1}-6_{-1} E lines tend to have
broader linewidth in the MSX dark objects than in the others, the former being
younger or less luminous than the latter. The origin of the broad emission is
discussed in terms of the interaction between an outflow and an ambient cloud.Comment: Accepted to Ap
Methanol masers : Reliable tracers of the early stages of high-mass star formation
The GLIMPSE and MSX surveys have been used to examine the mid-infrared
properties of a statistically complete sample of 6.7 GHz methanol masers. The
GLIMPSE point sources associated with methanol masers are clearly distinguished
from the majority, typically having extremely red mid-infrared colors, similar
to those expected of low-mass class 0 young stellar objects. The intensity of
the GLIMPSE sources associated with methanol masers is typically 4 magnitudes
brighter at 8.0 micron than at 3.6 micron. Targeted searches towards GLIMPSE
point sources with [3.6]-[4.5] > 1.3 and an 8.0 micron magnitude less than 10
will detect more than 80% of class II methanol masers. Many of the methanol
masers are associated with sources within infrared dark clouds (IRDC) which are
believed to mark regions where high-mass star formation is in its very early
stages. The presence of class II methanol masers in a significant fraction of
IRDC suggests that high-mass star formation is common in these regions.
Different maser species are thought to trace different evolutionary phases of
the high-mass star formation process. Comparison of the properties of the
GLIMPSE sources associated with class II methanol masers and other maser
species shows interesting trends, consistent with class I methanol masers
tracing a generally earlier evolutionary phase and OH masers tracing a later
evolutionary phase.Comment: 45 pages, 19 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
On the use of fractional Brownian motion simulations to determine the 3D statistical properties of interstellar gas
Based on fractional Brownian motion (fBm) simulations of 3D gas density and
velocity fields, we present a study of the statistical properties of
spectro-imagery observations (channel maps, integrated emission, and line
centroid velocity) in the case of an optically thin medium at various
temperatures. The power spectral index gamma_W of the integrated emission is
identified with that of the 3D density field (gamma_n) provided the medium's
depth is at least of the order of the largest transverse scale in the image,
and the power spectrum of the centroid velocity map is found to have the same
index gamma_C as that of the velocity field (gamma_v). Further tests with
non-fBm density and velocity fields show that this last result holds, and is
not modified either by the effects of density-velocity correlations. A
comparison is made with the theoretical predictions of Lazarian & Pogosyan
(2000).Comment: 28 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ. For preprint
with higher-resolution figures, see
http://www.cita.utoronto.ca/~mamd/miville_fbm2003.pd
ISOCAM observations of the L1551 star formation region
The results of a deep mid-IR ISOCAM survey of the L1551 dark molecular cloud
are presented. The aim of this survey is a search for new YSO (Young Stellar
Object) candidates, using two broad-band filters centred at 6.7 and 14.3
micron. Although two regions close to the centre of L1551 had to be avoided due
to saturation problems, 96 sources were detected in total (76 sources at 6.7
micron and 44 sources at 14.3 micron). Using the 24 sources detected in both
filters, 14 were found to have intrinsic mid-IR excess at 14.3 micron and were
therefore classified as YSO candidates. Using additional observations in B, V,
I, J, H and K obtained from the ground, most candidates detected at these
wavelengths were confirmed to have mid-IR excess at 6.7 micron as well, and
three additional YSO candidates were found. Prior to this survey only three
YSOs were known in the observed region (avoiding L1551 IRS5/NE and HL/XZ Tau).
This survey reveals 15 new YSO candidates, although several of these are
uncertain due to their extended nature either in the mid-IR or in the
optical/near-IR observations. Two of the sources with mid-IR excess are
previously known YSOs, one is a brown dwarf MHO 5 and the other is the well
known T Tauri star HH30, consisting of an outflow and an optically thick disk
seen edge on.Comment: 14 Pages, 8 Figure
Spitzer's mid-infrared view on an outer Galaxy Infrared Dark Cloud candidate toward NGC 7538
Infrared Dark Clouds (IRDCs) represent the earliest observed stages of
clustered star formation, characterized by large column densities of cold and
dense molecular material observed in silhouette against a bright background of
mid-IR emission. Up to now, IRDCs were predominantly known toward the inner
Galaxy where background infrared emission levels are high. We present Spitzer
observations with the Infrared Camera Array toward object G111.80+0.58 (G111)
in the outer Galactic Plane, located at a distance of ~3 kpc from us and ~10
kpc from the Galactic center. Earlier results show that G111 is a massive, cold
molecular clump very similar to IRDCs. The mid-IR Spitzer observations
unambiguously detect object G111 in absorption. We have identified for the
first time an IRDC in the outer Galaxy, which confirms the suggestion that
cluster-forming clumps are present throughout the Galactic Plane. However,
against a low mid-IR back ground such as the outer Galaxy it takes some effort
to find them.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJL -- 11 pages, 2 figures (1 colour
ISOCAM observations of the rho Ophiuchi cloud: Luminosity and mass functions of the pre-main sequence embedded cluster
We present the results of the first extensive mid-infrared (IR) imaging
survey of the rho Ophiuchi embedded cluster, performed with the ISOCAM camera
on board the ISO satellite. The main molecular cloud L1688, as well as L1689N
and L1689S, have been completely surveyed for point sources at 6.7 and 14.3
micron. A total of 425 sources are detected including 16 Class I, 123 Class II,
and 77 Class III young stellar objects (YSOs). Essentially all of the mid-IR
sources coincide with near-IR sources, but a large proportion of them are
recognized for the first time as YSOs. Our dual-wavelength survey allows us to
identify essentially all the YSOs with IR excess in the embedded cluster down
to Fnu ~ 10 - 15 mJy. It more than doubles the known population of Class II
YSOs and represents the most complete census to date of newly formed stars in
the rho Ophiuchi central region. The stellar luminosity function of the
complete sample of Class II YSOs is derived with a good accuracy down to L=
0.03 Lsun. A modeling of this lumino- sity function, using available pre-main
sequence tracks and plausible star for- mation histories, allows us to derive
the mass distribution of the Class II YSOs which arguably reflects the IMF of
the embedded cluster. We estimate that the IMF in rho Ophiuchi is well
described by a two-component power law with a low- mass index of -0.35+/-0.25,
a high-mass index of -1.7 (to be compared with the Salpeter value of -1.35),
and a break occurring at M = 0.55+/-0.25 Msun. This IMF is flat with no
evidence for a low-mass cutoff down to at least 0.06 Msun.Comment: A&A Document Class -- version 5.01, 27 pages, 10 figures v2: typos
added including few changes in source numberin
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