24 research outputs found
Kinematic structure of massive star-forming regions - I. Accretion along filaments
The mid- and far-infrared view on high-mass star formation, in particular
with the results from the Herschel space observatory, has shed light on many
aspects of massive star formation. However, these continuum studies lack
kinematic information.
We study the kinematics of the molecular gas in high-mass star-forming
regions.
We complemented the PACS and SPIRE far-infrared data of 16 high-mass
star-forming regions from the Herschel key project EPoS with N2H+ molecular
line data from the MOPRA and Nobeyama 45m telescope. Using the full N2H+
hyperfine structure, we produced column density, velocity, and linewidth maps.
These were correlated with PACS 70micron images and PACS point sources. In
addition, we searched for velocity gradients.
For several regions, the data suggest that the linewidth on the scale of
clumps is dominated by outflows or unresolved velocity gradients. IRDC18454 and
G11.11 show two velocity components along several lines of sight. We find that
all regions with a diameter larger than 1pc show either velocity gradients or
fragment into independent structures with distinct velocities. The velocity
profiles of three regions with a smooth gradient are consistent with gas flows
along the filament, suggesting accretion flows onto the densest regions.
We show that the kinematics of several regions have a significant and complex
velocity structure. For three filaments, we suggest that gas flows toward the
more massive clumps are present.Comment: accepted by A&
Kinematic structure of massive star-forming regions - I. Accretion along filaments
The mid- and far-infrared view on high-mass star formation, in particular
with the results from the Herschel space observatory, has shed light on many
aspects of massive star formation. However, these continuum studies lack
kinematic information.
We study the kinematics of the molecular gas in high-mass star-forming
regions.
We complemented the PACS and SPIRE far-infrared data of 16 high-mass
star-forming regions from the Herschel key project EPoS with N2H+ molecular
line data from the MOPRA and Nobeyama 45m telescope. Using the full N2H+
hyperfine structure, we produced column density, velocity, and linewidth maps.
These were correlated with PACS 70micron images and PACS point sources. In
addition, we searched for velocity gradients.
For several regions, the data suggest that the linewidth on the scale of
clumps is dominated by outflows or unresolved velocity gradients. IRDC18454 and
G11.11 show two velocity components along several lines of sight. We find that
all regions with a diameter larger than 1pc show either velocity gradients or
fragment into independent structures with distinct velocities. The velocity
profiles of three regions with a smooth gradient are consistent with gas flows
along the filament, suggesting accretion flows onto the densest regions.
We show that the kinematics of several regions have a significant and complex
velocity structure. For three filaments, we suggest that gas flows toward the
more massive clumps are present.Comment: accepted by A&
Polarisation of very-low-mass stars and brown dwarfs
Ultra-cool dwarfs of the L spectral type (Teff=1400-2200K) are known to have
dusty atmospheres. Asymmetries of the dwarf surface may arise from
rotationally-induced flattening and dust-cloud coverage, and may result in
non-zero linear polarisation through dust scattering.
We aim to study the heterogeneity of ultra-cool dwarfs' atmospheres and the
grain-size effects on the polarisation degree in a sample of nine late M, L and
early T dwarfs.
We obtain linear polarimetric imaging measurements using FORS1 at the Very
Large Telescope, in the Bessel I filter, and for a subset in the Bessel R and
the Gunn z filters.
We measure a polarisation degree of (0.31+/-0.06)% for LHS102BC. We fail to
detect linear polarisation in the rest of our sample, with upper-limits on the
polarisation degree of each object of 0.09% to 0.76% (95% CL). For those
targets we do not find evidence of large-scale cloud horizontal structure in
our data. Together with previous surveys, our results set the fraction of
ultra-cool dwarfs with detected linear polarisation to (30+10-6)% (1-sigma).
For three brown dwarfs, our observations indicate polarisation degrees
different (at the 3-sigma level) than previously reported, giving hints of
possible variations.
Our results fail to correlate with the current model predictions for
ultra-cool dwarf polarisation for a flattening-induced polarisation, or with
the variability studies for a polarisation induced by an hetereneous cloud
cover. This stresses the intricacy of each of those tasks, but may as well
proceed from complex and dynamic atmospheric processes.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, accepted by A&A. Reference problem and a few
typos corrected; improved error treatment of Zapatero Osorio et al (2005)
data, leading to minor differences in the result
The Earliest Phases of Star Formation (EPoS): a Herschel key project. The thermal structure of low-mass molecular cloud cores
Context. The temperature and density structure of molecular cloud cores are the most important physical quantities that determine the course of the protostellar collapse and the properties of the stars they form. Nevertheless, density profiles often rely either on the simplifying assumption of isothermality or on observationally poorly constrained model temperature profiles. The instruments of the Herschel satellite provide us for the first time with both the spectral coverage and the spatial resolution that is needed to directly measure the dust temperature structure of nearby molecular cloud cores.
Aims: With the aim of better constraining the initial physical conditions in molecular cloud cores at the onset of protostellar collapse, in particular of measuring their temperature structure, we initiated the guaranteed time key project (GTKP) ''The Earliest Phases of Star Formation'' (EPoS) with the Herschel satellite. This paper gives an overview of the low-mass sources in the EPoS project, the Herschel and complementary ground-based observations, our analysis method, and the initial results of the survey.
Methods: We study the thermal dust emission of 12 previously well-characterized, isolated, nearby globules using FIR and submm continuum maps at up to eight wavelengths between 100 {}m and 1.2 mm. Our sample contains both globules with starless cores and embedded protostars at different early evolutionary stages. The dust emission maps are used to extract spatially resolved SEDs, which are then fit independently with modified blackbody curves to obtain line-of-sight-averaged dust temperature and column density maps.
Results: We find that the thermal structure of all globules (mean mass 7 M) is dominated by external heating from the interstellar radiation field and moderate shielding by thin extended halos. All globules have warm outer envelopes (14-20 K) and colder dense interiors (8-12 K) with column densities of a few 10 cm. The protostars embedded in some of the globules raise the local temperature of the dense cores only within radii out to about 5000 AU, but do not significantly affect the overall thermal balance of the globules. Five out of the six starless cores in the sample are gravitationally bound and approximately thermally stabilized. The starless core in CB 244 is found to be supercritical and is speculated to be on the verge of collapse. For the first time, we can now also include externally heated starless cores in the L/L vs. T diagram and find that T {lt} 25 K seems to be a robust criterion to distinguish starless from protostellar cores, including those that only have an embedded very low-luminosity object. Herschel is an ESA space observatory with science instruments provided by European-led Principal Investigator consortia and with important participation from NASA.Partially based on observations carried out with the IRAM 30 m Telescope, with the Atacama Pathfinder Experiment (APEX), and with the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT). IRAM is supported by INSU/CNRS (France), MPG (Germany) and IGN (Spain). APEX is a collaboration between Max Planck Institut für Radioastronomie (MPIfR), Onsala Space Observatory (OSO), and the European Southern Observatory (ESO). The JCMT is operated by the Joint Astronomy Centre on behalf of the Particle Physics and Astronomy Research Council of the United Kingdom, the Netherlands Association for Scientific Research, and the National Research Council of Canada.Appendices A, B and C are available in electronic form at http://www.aanda.orgInterstellar matter and star formatio
B lymphocyte maturation in Wegener's granulomatosis: a comparative analysis of VH genes from endonasal lesions
BACKGROUND: Anti‐neutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA) directed against proteinase 3 (PR3) are highly specific for Wegener's granulomatosis (WG). Evidence for a pivotal role of PR3‐ANCA in the induction of vasculitis has been demonstrated. B cell clusters have been observed within endonasal biopsy specimens. OBJECTIVES: To determine whether B cell selection and maturation take place in granulomatous lesions of WG. METHODS: Granulomatous lesions and the immunoglobulin (VH) gene repertoire from nasal tissue of six WG patients—two active and two smouldering localised WG (ANCA negative, restricted to respiratory tract), plus one active and one smouldering PR3‐ANCA positive generalised WG—were characterised by immunohistochemistry, polymerase chain reaction, cloning, DNA sequencing and database comparison. RESULTS: B lymphocyte‐rich, follicle‐like areas were observed proximal to PR3 positive cells and plasma cells in granulomatous lesions; 184 VH genes from these granulomatous lesions were compared with 84 VH genes from peripheral blood of a healthy donor. The mutational pattern of VH genes from active WG resembled memory B cells. Structural homologies of VH genes from granulomatous lesions to PR3‐ANCA encoding genes were detected. Significantly more genes (55%, 45%, and 53%, respectively) from active WG compared with the healthy repertoire carried mutations to negatively charged amino acids within the binding site coding regions, favouring affinity to the positively charged PR3. CONCLUSIONS: Selection and affinity maturation of potentially PR3‐ANCA producing autoreactive B cells may start in granulomatous lesions, thereby contributing to disease progression from ANCA negative localised to PR3‐ANCA positive generalised WG