108 research outputs found
Dense molecular globulettes and the dust arc towards the runaway O star AE Aur (HD 34078)
Some runaway stars are known to display IR arc-like structures around them,
resulting from their interaction with surrounding interstellar material. The
properties of these features as well as the processes involved in their
formation are still poorly understood. We aim at understanding the physical
mechanisms that shapes the dust arc observed near the runaway O star AEAur
(HD34078). We obtained and analyzed a high spatial resolution map of the
CO(1-0) emission that is centered on HD34078, and that combines data from both
the IRAM interferometer and 30m single-dish antenna. The line of sight towards
HD34078 intersects the outer part of one of the detected globulettes, which
accounts for both the properties of diffuse UV light observed in the field and
the numerous molecular absorption lines detected in HD34078's spectra,
including those from highly excited H2 . Their modeled distance from the star
is compatible with the fact that they lie on the 3D paraboloid which fits the
arc detected in the 24 {\mu}m Spitzer image. Four other compact CO globulettes
are detected in the mapped area. These globulettes have a high density and
linewidth, and are strongly pressure-confined or transient. The good spatial
correlation between the CO globulettes and the IR arc suggests that they result
from the interaction of the radiation and wind emitted by HD 34078 with the
ambient gas. However, the details of this interaction remain unclear. A wind
mass loss rate significantly larger than the value inferred from UV lines is
favored by the large IR arc size, but does not easily explain the low velocity
of the CO globulettes. The effect of radiation pressure on dust grains also
meets several issues in explaining the observations. Further observational and
theoretical work is needed to fully elucidate the processes shaping the gas and
dust in bow shocks around runaway O stars. (Abridged)Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysic
Interstellar H2 toward HD 37903
We present an analysis of interstellar H2 toward HD 37903, which is a hot, B
1.5 V star located in the NGC 2023 reflection nebula. Meyer et al. (2001) have
used a rich spectrum of vibrationally excited H2 observed by the HST to
calculate a model of the interstellar cloud toward HD 37903. We extend Mayer's
analysis by including the v"=0 vibrational level observed by the FUSE
satellite.
The T01 temperature should not be interpreted as a rotational temperature,
but rather as a temperature of thermal equilibrium between the ortho and para
H2. The ortho to para H2 ratio is lower for collisionally populated levels than
for the levels populated by fluorescence.
The PDR model of the cloud located in front of HD 37903 points to a gas
temperature Tkin=110-377 K, hydrogen density nH=1874-544 cm^-3 and the
star-cloud distance of 0.45 pc
Low-ionization iron-rich Broad Absorption-Line Quasar SDSS J1652+2650: Physical conditions in the ejected gas from excited FeII and metastable HeI
We present high-resolution VLT/UVES spectroscopy and a detailed analysis of
the unique Broad Absorption-Line system towards the quasar SDSS
J165252.67+265001.96. This system exhibits low-ionization metal absorption
lines from the ground states and excited energy levels of Fe II and Mn II, and
the meta-stable 2^3S excited state of He I. The extended kinematics of the
absorber encompasses three main clumps with velocity offsets of -5680, -4550,
and -1770 km s from the quasar emission redshift, ,
derived from [O II] emission. Each clump shows moderate partial covering of the
background continuum source, . We discuss the
excitation mechanisms at play in the gas, which we use to constrain the
distance of the clouds from the Active Galactic Nucleus (AGN) as well as the
density, temperature, and typical sizes of the clouds. The number density is
found to be and the temperature , with longitudinal cloudlet sizes of pc. Cloudy
photo-ionization modelling of He I, which is also produced at the
interface between the neutral and ionized phases, assuming the number densities
derived from Fe II, constrains the ionization parameter to be .
This corresponds to distances of a few 100 pc from the AGN. We discuss these
results in the more general context of associated absorption-line systems and
propose a connection between FeLoBALs and the recently-identified
molecular-rich intrinsic absorbers. Studies of significant samples of FeLoBALs,
even though rare per se, will soon be possible thanks to large dedicated
surveys paired with high-resolution spectroscopic follow-ups.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 27 pages, 21 Figure
The KX method for producing K-band flux-limited samples of quasars
The longstanding question of the extent to which the quasar population is
affected by dust extinction, within host galaxies or galaxies along the line of
sight, remains open. More generally, the spectral energy distributions of
quasars vary significantly and flux-limited samples defined at different
wavelengths include different quasars. Surveys employing flux measurements at
widely separated wavelengths are necessary to characterise fully the spectral
properties of the quasar population. The availability of panoramic
near-infrared detectors on large telescopes provides the opportunity to
undertake surveys capable of establishing the importance of extinction by dust
on the observed population of quasars. We introduce an efficient method for
selecting K-band, flux-limited samples of quasars, termed ``KX'' by analogy
with the UVX method. This method exploits the difference between the power-law
nature of quasar spectra and the convex spectra of stars: quasars are
relatively brighter than stars at both short wavelengths (the UVX method) and
long wavelengths (the KX method). We consider the feasibility of undertaking a
large-area KX survey for damped Ly-alpha galaxies and gravitational lenses
using the planned UKIRT wide-field near-infrared camera.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, to appear in MNRA
CO emission and variable CH and CH+ absorption towards HD34078: evidence for a nascent bow shock ?
The runaway star HD34078, initially selected to investigate small scale
structure in a foreground diffuse cloud has been shown to be surrounded by
highly excited H2. We first search for an association between the foreground
cloud and HD34078. Second, we extend previous investigations of temporal
absorption line variations (CH, CH+, H2) in order to better characterize them.
We have mapped the CO(2-1) emission at 12 arcsec resolution around HD34078's
position, using the 30 m IRAM antenna. The follow-up of CH and CH+ absorption
lines has been extended over 5 more years. In parallel, CH absorption towards
the reddened star Zeta Per have been monitored to check the homogeneity of our
measurements. Three more FUSE spectra have been obtained to search for N(H2)
variations. CO observations show a pronounced maximum near HD34078's position,
clearly indicating that the star and diffuse cloud are associated. The optical
spectra confirm the reality of strong, rapid and correlated CH and CH+
fluctuations. On the other hand, N(H2, J=0) has varied by less than 5 % over 4
years. We also discard N(CH) variations towards Zeta Per at scales less than 20
AU. Observational constraints from this work and from 24 micron dust emission
appear to be consistent with H2 excitation but inconsistent with steady-state
bow shock models and rather suggest that the shell of compressed gas
surrounding HD34078, is seen at an early stage of the interaction. The CH and
CH+ time variations as well as their large abundances are likely due to
chemical structure in the shocked gas layer located at the stellar wind/ambient
cloud interface. Finally, the lack of variations for both N(H2, J=0) towards
HD34078 and N(CH) towards Zeta Per suggests that quiescent molecular gas is not
subject to pronounced small-scale structure.Comment: 19 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Metallicities, dust and molecular content of a QSO-Damped Lyman-{\alpha} system reaching log N (H i) = 22: An analog to GRB-DLAs
We present the elemental abundance and H2 content measurements of a Damped
Lyman-{\alpha} (DLA) system with an extremely large H i column density, log N(H
i) (cm-2) = 22.0+/-0.10, at zabs = 3.287 towards the QSO SDSS J 081634+144612.
We measure column densities of H2, C i, C i^*, Zn ii, Fe ii, Cr ii, Ni ii and
Si ii from a high signal-to-noise and high spectral resolution VLT-UVES
spectrum. The overall metallicity of the system is [Zn/H] = -1.10 +/- 0.10
relative to solar. Two molecular hydrogen absorption components are seen at z =
3.28667 and 3.28742 (a velocity separation of \approx 52 km s-1) in rotational
levels up to J = 3. We derive a total H2 column density of log N(H2) (cm-2) =
18.66 and a mean molecular fraction of f = 2N(H2)/[2N(H2) + N(H i)] =
10-3.04+/-0.37, typical of known H2-bearing DLA systems. From the observed
abundance ratios we conclude that dust is present in the Interstellar Medium
(ISM) of this galaxy, with a enhanced abundance in the H2-bearing clouds.
However, the total amount of dust along the line of sight is not large and does
not produce any significant reddening of the background QSO. The physical
conditions in the H2-bearing clouds are constrained directly from the column
densities of H2 in different rotational levels, C i and C i^* . The kinetic
temperature is found to be T = 75 K and the particle density lies in the range
nH = 50-80 cm-3 . The neutral hydrogen column density of this DLA is similar to
the mean H i column density of DLAs observed at the redshift of {\gamma}-ray
bursts (GRBs). We explore the relationship between GRB-DLAs and high column
density end of QSO-DLAs finding that the properties (metallicity and depletion)
of DLAs with log N(H i) > 21.5 in the two populations do not appear to be
significantly different
Interstellar absorptions towards the LMC: Small-scale density variations in Milky Way disc gas
Observations show that the ISM contains sub-structure on scales less than 1
pc, detected in the form of spatial and temporal variations in column densities
or optical depth. Despite the number of detections, the nature and ubiquity of
the small-scale structure in the ISM is not yet fully understood. We use UV
absorption data mainly from FUSE and partly from STIS of six LMC stars
(Sk-67{\deg}111, LH54-425, Sk-67{\deg}107, Sk-67{\deg}106, Sk-67{\deg}104, and
Sk-67{\deg}101), all located within 5 arcmin of each other, and analyse the
physical properties of the Galactic disc gas in front of the LMC on sub-pc
scales. We analyse absorption lines of a number of ions within the UV spectral
range. Most importantly, interstellar molecular hydrogen, neutral oxygen, and
fine-structure levels of neutral carbon have been used in order to study
changes in the density and the physical properties of the Galactic disc gas
over small angular scales. While most species do not show any significant
variation in their column densities, we find an enhancement of almost 2 dex for
H_2 from Sk-67{\deg}111 to Sk-67{\deg}101, accompanied by only a small
variation in the OI column density. Based on the formation-dissociation
equilibrium, we trace these variations to the actual density variations in the
molecular gas. On the smallest spatial scale of < 0.08 pc, between
Sk-67{\deg}107 and LH54-425, we find a gas density variation of a factor of
1.8. The line of sight towards LH54-425 does not follow the relatively smooth
change seen from Sk-67{\deg}101 to Sk-67{\deg}111, suggesting that
sub-structure might exist on a smaller spatial scale than the linear extent of
our sight-lines. Our observations suggest that the detected H_2 in these six
lines of sight is not necessarily physically connected, but that we are
sampling molecular cloudlets with pathlengths < 0.1-1.8 pc and possibly
different densities.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in A&
Radiative equilibrium in Monte Carlo radiative transfer using frequency distribution adjustment
The Monte Carlo method is a powerful tool for performing radiative
equilibrium calculations, even in complex geometries. The main drawback of the
standard Monte Carlo radiative equilibrium methods is that they require
iteration, which makes them numerically very demanding. Bjorkman & Wood
recently proposed a frequency distribution adjustment scheme, which allows
radiative equilibrium Monte Carlo calculations to be performed without
iteration, by choosing the frequency of each re-emitted photon such that it
corrects for the incorrect spectrum of the previously re-emitted photons.
Although the method appears to yield correct results, we argue that its
theoretical basis is not completely transparent, and that it is not completely
clear whether this technique is an exact rigorous method, or whether it is just
a good and convenient approximation. We critically study the general problem of
how an already sampled distribution can be adjusted to a new distribution by
adding data points sampled from an adjustment distribution. We show that this
adjustment is not always possible, and that it depends on the shape of the
original and desired distributions, as well as on the relative number of data
points that can be added. Applying this theorem to radiative equilibrium Monte
Carlo calculations, we provide a firm theoretical basis for the frequency
distribution adjustment method of Bjorkman & Wood, and we demonstrate that this
method provides the correct frequency distribution through the additional
requirement of radiative equilibrium. We discuss the advantages and limitations
of this approach, and show that it can easily be combined with the presence of
additional heating sources and the concept of photon weighting. However, the
method may fail if small dust grains are included... (abridged)Comment: 17 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in New Astronom
A far UV study of interstellar gas towards HD34078: high excitation H2 and small scale structure - Based on observations performed by the FUSE mission and at the CFHT telescope
To investigate the presence of small scale structure in the spatial
distribution of H2 molecules we have undertaken repeated FUSE UV observations
of the runaway O9.5V star, HD34078. In this paper we present five spectra
obtained between January 2000 and October 2002. These observations reveal an
unexpectedly large amount of highly excited H2. Column densities for H2 levels
from (v = 0, J = 0) up to (v = 0, J = 11) and for several v = 1 and v = 2
levels are determined. These results are interpreted in the frame of a model
involving essentially two components: i) a foreground cloud (unaffected by
HD34078) responsible for the H2 (J = 0, 1), CI, CH, CH+ and CO absorptions; ii)
a dense layer of gas (n = 10E4 cm-3) close to the O star and strongly
illuminated by its UV flux which accounts for the presence of highly excited
H2. Our model successfully reproduces the H2 excitation, the CI fine-structure
level populations as well as the CH, CH+ and CO column densities. We also
examine the time variability of H2 absorption lines tracing each of these two
components. From the stability of the J = 0, 1 and 2 damped H2 profiles we
infer a 3 sigma upper limit on column density variations Delta(N(H2))/N(H2) of
5% over scales ranging from 5 to 50 AU. This result clearly rules out any
pronounced ubiquitous small scale "density" structure of the kind apparently
seen in HI. The lines from highly excited gas are also quite stable (equivalent
to Delta(N)/N <= 30%) indicating i) that the ambient gas through which HD34078
is moving is relatively uniform and ii) that the gas flow along the shocked
layer is not subject to marked instabilitie
Molecular hydrogen in high-redshift Damped Lyman-alpha systems: The VLT/UVES database
We present the current status of ongoing searches for molecular hydrogen in
high-redshift (1.8 < zabs <= 4.2) Damped Lyman-alpha systems (DLAs)
capitalising on observations performed with the ESO Very Large Telescope (VLT)
Ultraviolet and Visual Echelle Spectrograph (UVES). We identify 77 DLAs/strong
sub-DLAs, with log N(HI) >= 20 and z_abs > 1.8, which have data that include
redshifted H2 Lyman and/or Werner-band absorption lines. This sample of HI, H2
and metal line measurements, performed in an homogeneous manner, is more than
twice as large as our previous sample (Ledoux et al. 2003) and considers every
system in which searches for H2 could be completed so far, including all
non-detections. H2 is detected in thirteen of the systems with molecular
fractions of values between f=5x10^-7 and f=0.1, where f=2N(H2)/(2N(H2)+N(HI)).
Upper limits are measured for the remaining 64 systems with detection limits of
typically log N(H2)=14.3, corresponding to log f<-5. We find that about 35% of
the DLAs with metallicities relative to solar [X/H]>=-1.3 (i.e., 1/20th solar),
with X = Zn, S or Si, have molecular fractions log f>-4.5, while H2 is detected
-- regardless of the molecular fraction -- in 50% of them. In contrast, only
about 4% of the [X/H]-4.5. We show that the presence of
H2 does not strongly depend on the total neutral hydrogen column density,
although the probability of finding log f>-4.5 is higher for log N(HI)>=20.8
than below this limit (19% and 7% respectively). The overall H2 detection rate
in log N(HI)>=20 DLAs is found to be about 16% (10% considering only log f>-4.5
detections) after correction for a slight bias towards large N(HI). [truncated]Comment: 11 pages, 1 table, 10 figures. Accepted for publication in A&
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