4 research outputs found
Methanol and excited OH masers towards W51: I - Main and South
MERLIN phase-referenced polarimetric observations towards the W51 complex
were carried out in March 2006 in the Class II methanol maser transition at
6.668 GHz and three of the four excited OH maser hyperfine transitions at 6
GHz. Methanol maser emission is found towards both W51 Main and South. We did
not detect any emission in the excited OH maser lines at 6.030 and 6.049 GHz
down to a 3 sigma limit of ~20 mJy per beam. Excited OH maser emission at 6.035
GHz is only found towards W51 Main. This emission is highly circularly
polarised (typically 45% and up to 87%). Seven Zeeman pairs were identified in
this transition, one of which contains detectable linear polarisation. The
magnetic field strength derived from these Zeeman pairs ranges from +1.6 to
+6.8 mG, consistent with the previously published magnetic field strengths
inferred from the OH ground-state lines. The bulk of the methanol maser
emission is associated with W51 Main, sampling a total area of ~3"x2.2" (i.e.,
~16200x11900 AU), while only two maser components, separated by ~2.5", are
found in the W51 South region. The astrometric distributions of both 6.668-GHz
methanol and 6.035-GHz excited-OH maser emission in the W51 Main/South region
are presented here. The methanol masers in W51 Main show a clear coherent
velocity and spatial structure with the bulk of the maser components
distributed into 2 regions showing a similar conical opening angle with of a
central velocity of ~+55.5 km/s and an expansion velocity of =<5 km/s. The mass
contained in this structure is estimated to be at least 22 solar masses. The
location of maser emission in the two afore-mentioned lines is compared with
that of previously published OH ground-state emission. Association with the
UCHII regions in the W51 Main/South complex and relationship of the masers to
infall or outflow in the region are discussed.Comment: 19 pages, 16 figures and 4 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA
Trigonometric Parallaxes of 6.7 GHz Methanol Masers
Emission from the 6.7 GHz methanol maser transition is very strong, is
relatively stable, has small internal motions, and is observed toward numerous
massive star-forming regions in the Galaxy. Our goal is to perform
high-precision astrometry using this maser transition to obtain accurate
distances to their host regions. Eight strong masers were observed during five
epochs of VLBI observations with the European VLBI Network between 2006 June,
and 2008 March. We report trigonometric parallaxes for five star-forming
regions, with accuracies as good as as. Distances to these
sources are kpc for ON 1, kpc
for L 1206, kpc for L 1287,
kpc for NGC 281-W, and kpc for S 255. The distances and
proper motions yield the full space motions of the star-forming regions hosting
the masers, and we find that these regions lag circular rotation on average by
17 km s, a value comparable to those found recently by similar
studies.Comment: 17 pages, 21 figures, 5 tables, accepted for publication in A&A,
corrected typo
First images of 6.7-GHz methanol masers in DR21(OH) and DR21(OH)N
The first images of 6.7-GHz methanol masers in the massive star-forming
regions DR21(OH) and DR21(OH)N are presented. By measuring the shapes, radial
velocities and polarization properties of these masers it is possible to map
out the structure, kinematics and magnetic fields in the molecular gas that
surrounds newly-formed massive stars. The intrinsic angular resolution of the
observations was 43 mas (~100 AU at the distance of DR21), but structures far
smaller than this were revealed by employing a non-standard mapping technique.
This technique was used in an attempt to identify the physical structure (e.g.
disc, outflow, shock) associated with the methanol masers. Two distinct
star-forming centres were identified. In DR21(OH) the masers had a linear
morphology, and the individual maser spots each displayed an internal velocity
gradient in the same direction as the large-scale structure. They were detected
at the same position as the OH 1.7-GHz ground-state masers, close to the centre
of an outflow traced by CO and class I methanol masers. The shape and velocity
gradients of the masers suggests that they probably delineate a shock. In
DR21(OH)N the methanol masers trace an arc with a double-peaked profile and a
complex velocity gradient. This velocity gradient closely resembles that of a
Keplerian disc. The masers in the arc are 4.5% linearly polarized, with a
polarization angle that indicates that the magnetic field direction is roughly
perpendicular to the large-scale magnetic field in the region (indicated by
lower angular resolution measurements of the CO and dust polarization). The
suitability of channel-by-channel centroid mapping is discussed as an improved
and viable means to maximise the information gained from the data.Comment: Accepted by MNRA