68 research outputs found
The OMC-1 molecular hydrogen outflow as a fragmented stellar wind bubble
We present new images of the OMC-1 molecular hydrogen outflow, made using
long-slit spectroscopy in order to accurately subtract the underlying continuum
emission. These images reveal an extremely clumpy, quasi-spherical inner shell
that breaks up at larger radii into bow-shocks and trailing wakes in the
north-west, as originally described by Allen & Burton (1993); a fainter
counter-finger to the south-east is newly discovered in the present data. While
the outflow appears to be broadly bipolar, this is probably due to an
interaction between an initially spherical wind from the source and a
large-scale density enhancement surrounding it, rather than direct collimation
imposed close to the source. The clumpy appearance of the inner shell confirms
the prediction of the recent model of Stone, Xu, & Mundy (1995), in which a
spherical and time-varying wind fragments a swept-up shell, producing
high-velocity shrapnel, which in turn drives bow-shocks into the surrounding
gas, resulting in the observed "fingers". As an alternative to the single
varying source proposed by Stone et al., we speculate that several young
sources in the BN-KL cluster may have been responsible for first sweeping up
the shell and then fragmenting it.Comment: 21 pages, 5 figures, in press (Astron. J., 1997 January), uses
aasms4.sty, also available at
http://www.mpia-hd.mpg.de/MPIA/Projects/THEORY/preprints.html#maclo
Interpreting the Mean Surface Density of Companions in Star-Forming Regions
We study the interpretation of the mean surface density of stellar companions
as a function of separation (or the two point correlation function of stars) in
star-forming regions. First, we consider the form of the functions for various
simple stellar distributions (binaries, global density profiles, clusters, and
fractals) and the effects of survey boundaries.
Following this, we study the dependencies of the separation at which a
transition from the binary to the large-scale clustering regime occurs. Larson
(1995) found that the mean surface density of companions follows different
power-law functions of separation in the two regimes. He identified the
transition separation with the typical Jeans length in the molecular cloud.
However, we show that this is valid only for special cases. In general, the
transition separation depends on the volume density of stars, the depth of the
star-forming region, the volume-filling nature of the stellar distribution, and
on the parameters of the binaries. Furthermore, the transition separation
evolves with time.
We then apply these results to the Taurus-Auriga, Ophiuchus, and Orion
Trapezium star-forming regions. We find that while the transition separation in
the Taurus-Auriga star-forming region may indicate a typical Jeans length, this
is not true of the Orion Trapezium Cluster. We also show that there is no
evidence for sub-clustering or fractal structure in the stars of the Orion
Trapezium Cluster. This is consistent with the fact that, if such structure
were present when the stars formed, it would have been erased by the current
age of the cluster due to the stellar velocity dispersion. [Abstract abridged]Comment: Accepted by MNRAS. 21 pages, 22 figures. Also available at
http://www.mpia-hd.mpg.de/theory/bate
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Intense molecular emission from the Lagoon nebula, M8
The discovery is reported of the second strongest source of mm and submm wavelength CO line emission, towards M8, the Lagoon Nebula in Sagittarius. The ~31 M⊙ molecular core has dimensions ~0.2 x 0.3pc and is centred on the O7V star Herschel 36 (H36), near the Hourglass Nebula in the core of M8. Emission from the CO line wings extends to the north and south of the Hourglass, although a lack of near-IR H2 emission indicates that outflow activity is much less prominent than in many active star-formation regions, and suggests that the CO line wings may trace the expanding edge of a cavity around H36. The molecular line data are compared with new near-IR narrow-band, continuum-subtracted images in He I, H2, and H,+ (Brγ) lines and archival HST emission-line images in Hα, [O III], and [S II]. The optical and near-IR data are found to be broadly consistent with previous photo-ionisation models of the Hourglass, which is excited by H 36. However, there are variations in the He I/Brγ line ratio which are difficult to explain
X-rays from HH210 in the Orion nebula
We report the detection during the Chandra Orion Ultradeep Project (COUP) of
two soft, constant, and faint X-ray sources associated with the Herbig-Haro
object HH210. HH210 is located at the tip of the NNE finger of the emission
line system bursting out of the BN-KL complex, northwest of the Trapezium
cluster in the OMC-1 molecular cloud. Using a recent Halpha image obtained with
the ACS imager on board HST, and taking into account the known proper motions
of HH210 emission knots, we show that the position of the brightest X-ray
source, COUP703, coincides with the emission knot 154-040a of HH210, which is
the emission knot of HH210 having the highest tangential velocity (425 km/s).
The second X-ray source, COUP704, is located on the complicated emission tail
of HH210 close to an emission line filament and has no obvious optical/infrared
counterpart. Spectral fitting indicates for both sources a plasma temperature
of ~0.8 MK and absorption-corrected X-ray luminosities of about 1E30 erg/s
(0.5-2.0 keV). These X-ray sources are well explained by a model invoking a
fast-moving, radiative bow shock in a neutral medium with a density of ~12000
cm^{-3}. The X-ray detection of COUP704 therefore reveals, in the complicated
HH210 region, an energetic shock not yet identified at other wavelengths.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures; accepted for publication in A&A Letter
Epsilon Indi Ba, Bb: a spectroscopic study of the nearest known brown dwarfs
The discovery of Epsilon Indi Ba and Bb, a nearby binary brown dwarf system
with a main-sequence companion, allows a concerted campaign to characterise the
physical parameters of two T dwarfs providing benchmarks against which
atmospheric and evolutionary models can be tested. Some recent observations
suggest the models at low mass and intermediate age may not reflect reality
with, however, few conclusive tests.
We are carrying out a comprehensive characterisation of these, the nearest
known brown dwarfs, to allow constraints to be placed upon models of cool field
dwarfs. We present broadband photometry from the V- to M-band and the
individual spectrum of both components from 0.6-5.1 microns at a resolution of
up to R=5000. A custom analytic profile fitting routine was implemented to
extract the blended spectra and photometry of both components separated by 0.7
arcsec. We confirm the spectral types to be T1 and T6, and notably, we do not
detect lithium at 6708A in the more massive object which may be indicative both
of the age of the system and the mass of the components.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, to appear in proceedings of Cool Stars 1
Additional constraints on circumstellar disks in the Trapezium Cluster
We discuss new constraints on the population of compact ionized sources in the Trapezium Cluster thought to arise from the ionization by the central OB stars of circumstellar disks around low-mass pre-main sequence stars. We present new HST Planetary Camera observations of two of these candidate disk sources, resolving extended nebulosity around them. One source shows a small-scale (greater than 100 AU) bow-shock structure, previously seen on larger scales by O'Dell et al. We show that the circumstellar disk model is the most likely one for the majority of sources, although it remains plausible that some of the larger objects could be equilibrium globules. We combine the most complete censuses of compact radio sources and stars in the core region to derive the fraction of the stellar population that may be associated with a circumstellar disk. Our estimate of 25-75 percent is comparable to that found for PMS stars in the Taurus-Auriga dark clouds, indicating that the dense cluster environment of the Trapezium has not drastically reduced the frequency of disks seen around pre-main sequence stars
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