3,058 research outputs found
Magnetic Field Structure around Low-Mass Class 0 Protostars: B335, L1527 and IC348-SMM2
We report new 350 micron polarization observations of the thermal dust
emission from the cores surrounding the low-mass, Class 0 YSOs L1527,
IC348-SMM2 and B335. We have inferred magnetic field directions from these
observations, and have used them together with results in the literature to
determine whether magnetically regulated core-collapse and star-formation
models are consistent with the observations. These models predict a pseudo-disk
with its symmetry axis aligned with the core magnetic field. The models also
predict a magnetic field pinch structure on a scale less than or comparable to
the infall radii for these sources. In addition, if the core magnetic field
aligns (or nearly aligns) the core rotation axis with the magnetic field before
core collapse, then the models predict the alignment (or near alignment) of the
overall pinch field structure with the bipolar outflows in these sources. We
show that if one includes the distorting effects of bipolar outflows on
magnetic fields, then in general the observational results for L1527 and
IC348-SMM2 are consistent with these magnetically regulated models. We can say
the same for B335 only if we assume the distorting effects of the bipolar
outflow on the magnetic fields within the B335 core are much greater than for
L1527 and IC348-SMM2. We show that the energy densities of the outflows in all
three sources are large enough to distort the magnetic fields predicted by
magnetically regulated models.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journa
The impact of two-dimensional elastic disk
The impact of a two-dimensional elastic disk with a wall is numerically
studied. It is clarified that the coefficient of restitution (COR) decreases
with the impact velocity. The result is not consistent with the recent
quasi-static theory of inelastic collisions even for very slow impact. The
abrupt drop of COR is found due to the plastic deformation of the disk, which
is assisted by the initial internal motion.(to be published in J. Phys. Soc.
Jpn.)Comment: 6 Pages,2 figure
A Direct Measurement of the Total Gas Column Density in Orion KL
The large number of high-J lines of C^(18)O available via the Herschel Space Observatory provide an unprecedented ability to model the total CO column density in hot cores. Using the emission from all the observed lines (up to J = 15-14), we sum the column densities in each individual level to obtain the total column after correcting for the population in the unobserved states. With additional knowledge of source size, V_(LSR), and line width, and both local thermodynamic equilibrium (LTE) and non-LTE modeling, we have determined the total C^(18)O column densities in the Extended Ridge, Outflow/Plateau, Compact Ridge, and Hot Core components of Orion KL to be 1.4 × 10^(16) cm^(–2), 3.5 × 10^(16) cm^(–2), 2.2 × 10^(16) cm^(–2), and 6.2 × 10^(16) cm^(–2), respectively. We also find that the C^(18)O/C^(17)O abundance ratio varies from 1.7 in the Outflow/Plateau, 2.3 in the Extended Ridge, 3.0 in the Hot Core, and to 4.1 in the Compact Ridge. This is in agreement with models in which regions with higher ultraviolet radiation fields selectively dissociate C^(17)O, although care must be taken when interpreting these numbers due to the size of the uncertainties in the C^(18)O/C^(17)O abundance ratio
Dynamic buckling and fragmentation in brittle rods
We present experiments on the dynamic buckling and fragmentation of slender
rods axially impacted by a projectile. By combining the results of Saint-Venant
and elastic beam theory, we derive a preferred wavelength lambda for the
buckling instability, and experimentally verify the resulting scaling law for a
range of materials including teflon, dry pasta, glass, and steel. For brittle
materials, buckling leads to the fragmentation of the rod. Measured fragment
length distributions show two clear peaks near lambda/2 and lambda/4. The
non-monotonic nature of the distributions reflect the influence of the
deterministic buckling process on the more random fragmentation processes.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Physical Review Letter
Water Abundance in Molecular Cloud Cores
We present Submillimeter Wave Astronomy Satellite (SWAS) observations of the
1_{10}-1_{01} transition of ortho-water at 557 GHz toward 12 molecular cloud
cores. The water emission was detected in NGC 7538, Rho Oph A, NGC 2024, CRL
2591, W3, W3(OH), Mon R2, and W33, and was not detected in TMC-1, L134N, and
B335. We also present a small map of the water emission in S140. Observations
of the H_2^{18}O line were obtained toward S140 and NGC 7538, but no emission
was detected. The abundance of ortho-water relative to H_2 in the giant
molecular cloud cores was found to vary between 6x10^{-10} and 1x10^{-8}. Five
of the cloud cores in our sample have previous water detections; however, in
all cases the emission is thought to arise from hot cores with small angular
extents. The water abundance estimated for the hot core gas is at least 100
times larger than in the gas probed by SWAS. The most stringent upper limit on
the ortho-water abundance in dark clouds is provided in TMC-1, where the
3-sigma upper limit on the ortho-water fractional abundance is 7x10^{-8}.Comment: 5 pages, 3 Postscript figures, uses aastex.cls, emulateapj5.sty
(included), and apjfonts.sty (included
The Distribution of Water Emission in M17SW
We present a 17-point map of the M17SW cloud core in the 1_{10}-1_{01}
transition of ortho-water at 557 GHz obtained with the Submillimeter Wave
Astronomy Satellite. Water emission was detected in 11 of the 17 observed
positions. The line widths of the water emission vary between 4 and 9 km
s^{-1}, and are similar to other emission lines that arise in the M17SW core. A
direct comparison is made between the spatial extent of the water emission and
the ^{13}CO J = 5\to4 emission; the good agreement suggests that the water
emission arises in the same warm, dense gas as the ^{13}CO emission. A spectrum
of the H_2^{18}O line was also obtained at the center position of the cloud
core, but no emission was detected. We estimate that the average abundance of
ortho-water relative to H_2 within the M17 dense core is approximately
1x10^{-9}, 30 times smaller than the average for the Orion core. Toward the H
II region/molecular cloud interface in M17SW the ortho-water abundance may be
about 5 times larger than in the dense core.Comment: 4 pages, 3 Postscript figures, uses aastex.cls, emulateapj5.sty
(included), and apjfonts.sty (included
Determining the Parameters of Massive Protostellar Clouds via Radiative Transfer Modeling
A one-dimensional method for reconstructing the structure of prestellar and
protostellar clouds is presented. The method is based on radiative transfer
computations and a comparison of theoretical and observed intensity
distributions at both millimeter and infrared wavelengths. The radiative
transfer of dust emission is modeled for specified parameters of the density
distribution, central star, and external background, and the theoretical
distribution of the dust temperature inside the cloud is determined. The
intensity distributions at millimeter and IR wavelengths are computed and
quantitatively compared with observational data. The best-fit model parameters
are determined using a genetic minimization algorithm, which makes it possible
to reveal the ranges of parameter degeneracy as well. The method is illustrated
by modeling the structure of the two infrared dark clouds IRDC-320.27+029 (P2)
and IRDC-321.73+005 (P2). The derived density and temperature distributions can
be used to model the chemical structure and spectral maps in molecular lines.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy Report
Self-diffusion in granular gases
The coefficient of self-diffusion for a homogeneously cooling granular gas
changes significantly if the impact-velocity dependence of the restitution
coefficient is taken into account. For the case of a constant
the particles spread logarithmically slow with time, whereas the
velocity dependent coefficient yields a power law time-dependence. The impact
of the difference in these time dependences on the properties of a freely
cooling granular gas is discussed.Comment: 6 pages, no figure
A spectral line survey of Orion KL in the bands 486-492 and 541-577 GHz with the Odin satellite I. The observational data
Spectral line surveys are useful since they allow identification of new
molecules and new lines in uniformly calibrated data sets. Nonetheless, large
portions of the sub-millimetre spectral regime remain unexplored due to severe
absorptions by H2O and O2 in the terrestrial atmosphere. The purpose of the
measurements presented here is to cover wavelength regions at and around 0.55
mm -- regions largely unobservable from the ground. Using the Odin
astronomy/aeronomy satellite, we performed the first spectral survey of the
Orion KL molecular cloud core in the bands 486--492 and 541--576 GHz with
rather uniform sensitivity (22--25 mK baseline noise). Odin's 1.1 m size
telescope, equipped with four cryo-cooled tuneable mixers connected to broad
band spectrometers, was used in a satellite position-switching mode. Two mixers
simultaneously observed different 1.1 GHz bands using frequency steps of 0.5
GHz (25 hours each). An on-source integration time of 20 hours was achieved for
most bands. The entire campaign consumed ~1100 orbits, each containing one hour
of serviceable astro-observation. We identified 280 spectral lines from 38
known interstellar molecules (including isotopologues) having intensities in
the range 80 to 0.05 K. An additional 64 weak lines remain unidentified. Apart
from the ground state rotational 1(1,0)--1(0,1) transitions of ortho-H2O, H218O
and H217O, the high energy 6(2,4)--7(1,7) line of para-H2O and the
HDO(2,0,2--1,1,1) line have been observed, as well as the 1,0--0,1 lines from
NH3 and its rare isotopologue 15NH3. We suggest assignments for some
unidentified features, notably the new interstellar molecules ND and SH-.
Severe blends have been detected in the line wings of the H218O, H217O and 13CO
lines changing the true linewidths of the outflow emission.Comment: 21 pages, 10 figures, 7 tables, accepeted for publication in
Astronomy and Astrophysics 30 August 200
Modeling of Protostellar Clouds and their Observational Properties
A physical model and two-dimensional numerical method for computing the
evolution and spectra of protostellar clouds are described. The physical model
is based on a system of magneto-gasdynamical equations, including ohmic and
ambipolar diffusion, and a scheme for calculating the thermal and ionization
structure of a cloud. The dust and gas temperatures are determined during the
calculations of the thermal structure of the cloud. The results of computing
the dynamical and thermal structure of the cloud are used to model the
radiative transfer in continuum and in molecular lines. We presented the
results for clouds in hydrostatic and thermal equilibrium. The evolution of a
rotating magnetic protostellar cloud starting from a quasi-static state is also
considered. Spectral maps for optically thick lines of linear molecules are
analyzed. We have shown that the influence of the magnetic field and rotation
can lead to a redistribution of angular momentum in the cloud and the formation
of a characteristic rotational velocity structure. As a result, the
distribution of the velocity centroid of the molecular lines can acquire an
hourglass shape. We plan to use the developed program package together with a
model for the chemical evolution to interpret and model observed starless and
protostellar cores.Comment: Accepted to Astronomy Report
- …