9 research outputs found

    Envolturas circunestelares alrededor de estrellas evolucionadas de masa intermedia y alta

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    Tesis doctoral inédita. Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Facultad de Ciencias, Departamento de Física Teórica. Fecha de lectura: 21-11-200

    The Origin of OB Clusters: From 10 pc to 0.1 pc

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    We observe the 1.2 mm continuum emission around the OB cluster forming region G10.6-0.4, using the IRAM 30m telescope MAMBO-2 bolometer array and the Submillimeter array. Comparison of the Spitzer 24 μ\mum and 8 μ\mum images with our 1.2 mm continuum maps reveals the ionization front of an HII region, the photon-dominated layer, and several 5 pc scale filaments following the outer edge of the photon-dominated layer. The filaments, which are resolved in the MAMBO-2 observations, show regularly spaced parsec-scale molecular clumps, embedded with a cluster of submillimeter molecular cores as shown in the SMA 0.87 mm observations. Toward the center of the G10.6-0.4 region, the combined SMA+IRAM 30m continuum image reveals several, parsec-scale protrusions. They may continue down to within 0.1 pc of the geometric center of a dense 3 pc size structure, where a 200 M_{\odot} OB cluster resides. The observed filaments may facilitate mass accretion onto the central cluster--forming region in the presence of strong radiative and mechanical stellar feedbacks. Their filamentary geometry may also facilitate fragmentation. We did not detect any significant polarized emission at 0.87 mm in the inner 1 pc region with the SMA.Comment: 32 pages, 10 figures, Accepted by ApJ on 2011.October

    The interplay of dense gas and stars in M33

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    We are studying the interplay of star formation and its 'fuel', the molecular gas (diffuse and dense) at selected positions along the major axis of M33. We have observed the ground-state transitions of HCN, HCO+, and 13CO using the IRAM 30m telescope. These data will complement existing CO, HI, Spitzer, and radio continuum maps. Furthermore, these data will be complemented by far-infrared maps of [CII], H2O, [OI], [NII], and the dust continuum taken with Herschel in the open time key project HERM33ES

    The messy death of a multiple star system and the resulting planetary nebula as observed by JWST

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    Full list of authors: De Marco, Orsola; Akashi, Muhammad; Akras, Stavros; Alcolea, Javier; Aleman, Isabel; Amram, Philippe; Balick, Bruce; De Beck, Elvire; Blackman, Eric G.; Boffin, Henri M. J.; Boumis, Panos; Bublitz, Jesse; Bucciarelli, Beatrice; Bujarrabal, Valentin; Cami, Jan; Chornay, Nicholas; Chu, You-Hua; Corradi, Romano L. M.; Frank, Adam; García-Hernández, D. A.; García-Rojas, Jorge; García-Segura, Guillermo; Gómez-Llanos, Veronica; Gonçalves, Denise R.; Guerrero, Martín A.; Jones, David; Karakas, Amanda I.; Kastner, Joel H.; Kwok, Sun; Lykou, Foteini; Manchado, Arturo; Matsuura, Mikako; McDonald, Iain; Miszalski, Brent; Mohamed, Shazrene S.; Monreal-Ibero, Ana; Monteiro, Hektor; Montez, Rodolfo; Baez, Paula Moraga; Morisset, Christophe; Nordhaus, Jason; Mendes de Oliveira, Claudia; Osborn, Zara; Otsuka, Masaaki; Parker, Quentin A.; Peeters, Els; Quint, Bruno C.; Quintana-Lacaci, Guillermo; Redman, Matt; Ruiter, Ashley J.; Sabin, Laurence; Sahai, Raghvendra; Contreras, Carmen Sánchez; Santander-García, Miguel; Seitenzahl, Ivo; Soker, Noam; Speck, Angela K.; Stanghellini, Letizia; Steffen, Wolfgang; Toalá, Jesús A.; Ueta, Toshiya; Van de Steene, Griet; Van Winckel, Hans; Ventura, Paolo; Villaver, Eva; Vlemmings, Wouter; Walsh, Jeremy R.; Wesson, Roger; Zijlstra, Albert A.Planetary nebulae—the ejected envelopes of red giant stars—provide us with a history of the last, mass-losing phases of 90% of stars initially more massive than the Sun. Here we analyse images of the planetary nebula NGC 3132 from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) Early Release Observations. A structured, extended hydrogen halo surrounding an ionized central bubble is imprinted with spiral structures, probably shaped by a low-mass companion orbiting the central star at about 40–60 au. The images also reveal a mid-infrared excess at the central star, interpreted as a dusty disk, which is indicative of an interaction with another closer companion. Including the previously known A-type visual companion, the progenitor of the NGC 3132 planetary nebula must have been at least a stellar quartet. The JWST images allow us to generate a model of the illumination, ionization and hydrodynamics of the molecular halo, demonstrating the power of JWST to investigate complex stellar outflows. Furthermore, new measurements of the A-type visual companion allow us to derive the value for the mass of the progenitor of a central star with excellent precision: 2.86 ± 0.06 M⊙. These results serve as pathfinders for future JWST observations of planetary nebulae, providing unique insight into fundamental astrophysical processes including colliding winds and binary star interactions, with implications for supernovae and gravitational-wave systems. © 2022, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.We acknowledge the International Astronomical Union that oversees the work of Commission H3 on Planetary Nebulae. It is through the coordinating activity of this committee that this paper came together. S.A. acknowledges support under the grant 5077 financed by IAASARS/NOA. J.A. and V.B. acknowledge support from the EVENTs/Nebulae-Web research programme, Spanish AEI grant PID2019-105203GB-C21. I.A. acknowledges the support of CAPES, Brazil (Finance Code 001). E.D.B. acknowledges financial support from the Swedish National Space Agency. E.G.B. acknowledges NSF grants AST-1813298 and PHY-2020249. J.C. and E.P. acknowledge support from an NSERC Discovery Grant. G.G.-S. thanks M. L. Norman and the Laboratory for Computational Astrophysics for the use of ZEUS-3D. D.A.G.-H. and A.M. acknowledge support from the ACIISI, Gobierno de Canarias and the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) under grant with reference PROID2020010051 as well as from the State Research Agency (AEI) of the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (MICINN) under grant PID2020-115758GB-I00. J.G.-R. acknowledges support from Spanish AEI under Severo Ochoa Centres of Excellence Programme 2020-2023 (CEX2019-000920-S). J.G.-R. and V.G.-L. acknowledge support from ACIISI and ERDF under grant ProID2021010074. D.R.G. acknowledges the CNPq grant 313016/2020-8. M.A.G. acknowledges support of grant PGC2018-102184-B-I00 of the Ministerio de Educación, Innovación y Universidades cofunded with FEDER funds and from the State Agency for Research of the Spanish MCIU through the ‘Center of Excellence Severo Ochoa’ award to the Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía (SEV-2017-0709). D.J. acknowledges support from the Erasmus+ programme of the European Union under grant number 2020-1-CZ01-KA203-078200. A.I.K. and Z.O. were supported by the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for All Sky Astrophysics in 3 Dimensions (ASTRO 3D), through project number CE170100013. This research is/was supported by an Australian Government Research Training Program (RTP) Scholarship. M.M. and R.W. acknowledge support from STFC Consolidated grant (2422911). C.M. acknowledges support from UNAM/DGAPA/PAPIIT under grant IN101220. S.S.M. acknowledges funding from UMiami, the South African National Research Foundation and the University of Cape Town VC2030 Future Leaders Award. J.N. acknowledges support from NSF grant AST-2009713. C.M.d.O. acknowledges funding from FAPESP through projects 2017/50277-0, 2019/11910-4 e 2019/26492-3 and CNPq, process number 309209/2019-6. J.H.K. and P.M.B. acknowledge support from NSF grant AST-2206033 and a NRAO Student Observing Support grant to Rochester Institute of Technology. M.O. was supported by JSPS Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research(C) (JP19K03914 and 22K03675). Q.A.P. acknowledges support from the HKSAR Research grants council. Vera C. Rubin Observatory is a Federal project jointly funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science, with early construction funding received from private donations through the LSST Corporation. The NSF-funded LSST (now Rubin Observatory) Project Office for construction was established as an operating centre under the management of the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy (AURA). The DOE-funded effort to build the Rubin Observatory LSST Camera (LSSTCam) is managed by SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory (SLAC). A.J.R. was supported by the Australian Research Council through award number FT170100243. L.S. acknowledges support from PAPIIT UNAM grant IN110122. C.S.C.’s work is part of I+D+i project PID2019-105203GB-C22 funded by the Spanish MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033. M.S.-G. acknowledges support by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (MICINN) through projects AxIN (grant AYA2016-78994-P) and EVENTs/Nebulae-Web (grant PID2019-105203GB-C21). R.S.’s contribution to the research described here was carried out at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, under a contract with NASA. J.A.T. thanks the Marcos Moshisnky Fundation (Mexico) and UNAM PAPIIT project IA101622. E.V. acknowledges support from the ‘On the rocks II project’ funded by the Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades under grant PGC2018-101950-B-I00. A.A.Z. acknowledges support from STFC under grant ST/T000414/1. This research made use of Photutils, an Astropy package for detection and photometry of astronomical sources83, of the Spanish Virtual Observatory (https://svo.cab.inta-csic.es) project funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033/ through grant PID2020-112949GB-I00 and of the computing facilities available at the Laboratory of Computational Astrophysics of the Universidade Federal de Itajubá (LAC-UNIFEI, which is maintained with grants from CAPES, CNPq and FAPEMIG).Peer reviewe

    The Binary and the Disk: The Beauty is Found within NGC3132 with JWST

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    The planetary nebula (PN) NGC 3132 is a striking example of the dramatic but poorly understood mass-loss phenomena that (1–8) M _⊙ stars undergo during their death throes as they evolve into white dwarfs (WDs). From an analysis of JWST multiwavelength (0.9–18 μ m) imaging of NGC 3132, we report the discovery of an extended dust cloud around the WD central star (CS) of NGC 3132, seen most prominently in the 18 μ m image, with a surface-brightness-limited radial extent of ≳2″. We show that the A2V star located 1.″7 to CS’s northeast (and 0.75 kpc from Earth) is gravitationally bound to the latter, as evidenced by the detection of relative orbital angular motion of 0.°24 ± 0.°045 between these stars over ∼20 yr. Using aperture photometry of the CS extracted from the JWST images, together with published optical photometry and an archival UV spectrum, we have constructed the spectral energy distribution (SED) of the CS and its extended emission over the UV to mid-IR (0.091–18 μ m) range. We find that fitting the SED of the CS and the radial intensity distributions at 7.7, 12.8, and 18 μ m with thermal emission from dust requires a cloud that extends to a radius of ≳1785 au, with a dust mass of ∼1.3 × 10 ^−2 M _⊕ and grains that are 70% silicate and 30% amorphous carbon. We propose plausible origins of the dust cloud and an evolutionary scenario in which a system of three stars—the CS, a close low-mass companion, and a more distant A2V star—forms a stable hierarchical triple system on the main sequence but becomes dynamically unstable later, resulting in the spectacular mass ejections that form the current, multipolar PN

    Hints of the Existence of C-rich Massive Evolved Stars

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    We aim to study the properties of a particular type of evolved stars, C-rich evolved stars with high expansion velocities. For this purpose we have focused on the two best studied objects within this group, IRC+10401 and AFGL 2233. We focused on determining their luminosity by studying their spectral energy distribution. Also, we have obtained single-dish line profiles and interferometric maps of the CO J - 1-0 and J = 2-1. emission lines for both objects. We have modeled this emission using a LVG radiative transfer code to determine the kinetic temperature and density profiles of the gas ejected by these stars. We have found that the luminosities obtained for these objects (log(L/L-circle dot). =. 4.1 and 5.4) locate them in the domain of the massive asymptotic giant branch stars (AGBs) and the red supergiant stars (RSGs). In addition, the mass-loss rates obtained (1.5. x. 10(-5)-6. x 10(-3)M(circle dot) yr(-1)) suggest that while IRC+ 10401 might be an AGB star, AFGL 2233 could be an RSG star. All these results, together with those from previous works, suggest that both objects are massive objects, IRC+10401 a massive evolved star with M-init similar to 5-9M(circle dot). which could correspond to an AGB or an RSG and AFGL 2233 an RSG with M-init similar to 20M(circle dot), which would confirm the existence of massive C-rich evolved stars. Two scenarios are proposed to form these types of objects. The first one is capable of producing high-mass AGB stars up to similar to 8M(circle dot). and the second one is capable of forming C-rich RSGs like AFGL 2233

    Atmospheric molecular blobs shape up circumstellar envelopes of AGB stars

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    International audienceDuring their thermally pulsing phase, asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars eject material that forms extended dusty envelopes1. Visible polarimetric imaging found clumpy dust clouds within two stellar radii of several oxygen-rich stars2-6. Inhomogeneous molecular gas has also been observed in multiple emission lines within several stellar radii of different oxygen-rich stars, including W Hya and Mira7-10. At the stellar surface level, infrared images have shown intricate structures around the carbon semiregular variable R Scl and in the S-type star π1 Gru11,12. Infrared images have also shown clumpy dust structures within a few stellar radii of the prototypical carbon AGB star IRC+10°216 (refs. 13,14), and studies of molecular gas distribution beyond the dust formation zone have also shown complex circumstellar structures15. Because of the lack of sufficient spatial resolution, however, the distribution of molecular gas in the stellar atmosphere and the dust formation zone of AGB carbon stars is not known, nor is how it is subsequently expelled. Here we report observations with a resolution of one stellar radius of the recently formed dust and molecular gas in the atmosphere of IRC+10°216. Lines of HCN, SiS and SiC2 appear at different radii and in different clumps, which we interpret as large convective cells in the photosphere, as seen in Betelgeuse16. The convective cells coalesce with pulsation, causing anisotropies that, together with companions17,18, shape its circumstellar envelope

    The messy death of a multiple star system and the resulting planetary nebula as observed by JWST

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    International audiencePlanetary nebulae—the ejected envelopes of red giant stars—provide us with a history of the last, mass-losing phases of 90% of stars initially more massive than the Sun. Here we analyse images of the planetary nebula NGC 3132 from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) Early Release Observations. A structured, extended hydrogen halo surrounding an ionized central bubble is imprinted with spiral structures, probably shaped by a low-mass companion orbiting the central star at about 40-60 au. The images also reveal a mid-infrared excess at the central star, interpreted as a dusty disk, which is indicative of an interaction with another closer companion. Including the previously known A-type visual companion, the progenitor of the NGC 3132 planetary nebula must have been at least a stellar quartet. The JWST images allow us to generate a model of the illumination, ionization and hydrodynamics of the molecular halo, demonstrating the power of JWST to investigate complex stellar outflows. Furthermore, new measurements of the A-type visual companion allow us to derive the value for the mass of the progenitor of a central star with excellent precision: 2.86 ± 0.06 M⊙. These results serve as pathfinders for future JWST observations of planetary nebulae, providing unique insight into fundamental astrophysical processes including colliding winds and binary star interactions, with implications for supernovae and gravitational-wave systems
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