149 research outputs found

    The peculiar molecular envelope around the post-AGB star IRAS 08544--4431

    Full text link
    Circumbinary disks have been hypothesized to exist around a number of binary post-AGB stars. Although most of the circumbinary disks have been inferred through the near IR excess, a few of them are strong emitters of molecular emission. Here we present high angular resolution observations of the emission of 12^{12}CO and its isotopomer 13^{13}CO J=2--1 line from the circumstellar envelope around the binary post-AGB star IRAS 08544−-4431, which is one of the most prominent members of this class of objects. We find that the envelope is resolved in our observations and two separate components can be identified: (a) a central extended and strong component with very narrow linewidth between 2 - 6 \kms; (b) a weak bipolar outflow with expansion velocity up to 8 \kms. The central compact component possesses low and variable 12^{12}CO/13^{13}CO J=2--1 line ratio, indicating optically thick emission of the main isotope. We estimate a molecular gas mass of 0.0047 M⊙_\odot for this component based on the optically thinner 13^{13}CO J=2--1 line. We discuss the relation of the molecular envelope and the circumbinary disk inferred from near IR excess and compare with other known cases where the distribution of molecular gas has been imaged at high angular resolution.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journa

    The shaping effect of collimated fast outflows in the Egg nebula

    Full text link
    We present high angular resolution observations of the HC3_3N J=5--4 line from the Egg nebula, which is the archetype of protoplanetary nebulae. We find that the HC3_{\rm 3}N emission in the approaching and receding portion of the envelope traces a clumpy hollow shell, similar to that seen in normal carbon rich envelopes. Near the systemic velocity, the hollow shell is fragmented into several large blobs or arcs with missing portions correspond spatially to locations of previously reported high--velocity outlows in the Egg nebula. This provides direct evidence for the disruption of the slowly--expanding envelope ejected during the AGB phase by the collimated fast outflows initiated during the transition to the protoplanetary nebula phase. We also find that the intersection of fast molecular outflows previously suggested as the location of the central post-AGB star is significantly offset from the center of the hollow shell. From modelling the HC3_3N distribution we could reproduce qualitatively the spatial kinematics of the HC3_3N J=5--4 emission using a HC3_3N shell with two pairs of cavities cleared by the collimated high velocity outflows along the polar direction and in the equatorial plane. We infer a relatively high abundance of HC3_3N/H2_2 ∼\sim3x10−6^{-6} for an estimated mass--loss rate of 3x10−5^{-5} M⊙_\odot yr−1^{-1} in the HC3_3N shell. The high abundance of HC3_3N and the presence of some weaker J=5--4 emission in the vicinity of the central post-AGB star suggest an unusually efficient formation of this molecule in the Egg nebula.Comment: 22 pages, 6 figures, submitted to the Astrophysical Journa

    Dense molecular clumps in the envelope of the yellow hypergiant IRC+10420

    Get PDF
    The circumstellar envelope of the hypergiant star IRC+10420 has been traced as far out in SiO J=2-1 as in CO J = 1-0 and CO J = 2-1, in dramatic contrast with the centrally condensed (thermal) SiO- but extended CO-emitting envelopes of giant and supergiant stars. Here, we present an observation of the circumstellar envelope in SiO J=1-0 that, when combined with the previous observation in {\sioii}, provide more stringent constraints on the density of the SiO-emitting gas than hitherto possible. The emission in SiO peaks at a radius of ∼\sim2\arcsec\ whereas that in SiO J=2-1 emission peaks at a smaller radius of ∼\sim1\arcsec, giving rise to their ring-like appearances. The ratio in brightness temperature between SiO J=1-0 and SiO J=2-1 decreases from a value well above unity at the innermost measurable radius to about unity at radius of ∼\sim2\arcsec, beyond which this ratio remains approximately constant. Dividing the envelope into three zones as in models for the CO J = 1-0 and CO J = 2-1 emission, we show that the density of the SiO-emitting gas is comparable with that of the CO-emitting gas in the inner zone, but at least an order of magnitude higher by comparison in both the middle and outer zones. The SiO-emitting gas therefore originates from dense clumps, likely associated with the dust clumps seen in scattered optical light, surrounded by more diffuse CO-emitting interclump gas. We suggest that SiO molecules are released from dust grains due to shock interactions between the dense SiO-emitting clumps and the diffuse CO-emitting interclump gas.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap

    Multiple Radial Cool Molecular Filaments in NGC 1275

    Full text link
    We have extended our previous observation (Lim et al. 2008) of NGC1275 covering a central radius of ~10kpc to the entire main body of cool molecular gas spanning ~14kpc east and west of center. We find no new features beyond the region previously mapped, and show that all six spatially-resolved features on both the eastern and western sides (three on each side) comprise radially aligned filaments. Such radial filaments can be most naturally explained by a model in which gas deposited "upstream" in localized regions experiencing an X-ray cooling flow subsequently free falls along the gravitational potential of PerA, as we previously showed can explain the observed kinematics of the two longest filaments. All the detected filaments coincide with locally bright Halpha features, and have a ratio in CO(2-1) to Halpha luminosity of ~1e-3; we show that these filaments have lower star formation efficiencies than the nearly constant value found for molecular gas in nearby normal spiral galaxies. On the other hand, some at least equally luminous Halpha features, including a previously identified giant HII region, show no detectable cool molecular gas with a corresponding ratio at least a factor of ~5 lower; in the giant HII region, essentially all the pre-existing molecular gas may have been converted to stars. We demonstrate that all the cool molecular filaments are gravitationally bound, and without any means of support beyond thermal pressure should collapse on timescales ~< 1e6yrs. By comparison, as we showed previously the two longest filaments have much longer dynamical ages of ~1e7yrs. Tidal shear may help delay their collapse, but more likely turbulent velocities of at least a few tens km/s or magnetic fields with strengths of at least several ~10uG are required to support these filaments.Comment: 52 pages, 11 figures. Accepted to Ap

    Molecular Gas and Star formation in ARP 302

    Full text link
    We present the Submillimeter Array observation of the CO J=2-1 transition towards the northern galaxy, ARP 302N, of the early merging system, ARP 302. Our high angular resolution observation reveals the extended spatial distribution of the molecular gas in ARP 302N. We find that the molecular gas has a very asymmetric distribution with two strong concentrations on either side of the center together with a weaker one offset by about 8 kpc to the north. The molecular gas distribution is also found to be consistent with that from the hot dust as traced by the 24 micro continuum emission observed by the Spitzer. The line ratio of CO J=2-1/1-0 is found to vary strongly from about 0.7 near the galaxy center to 0.4 in the outer part of the galaxy. Excitation analysis suggests that the gas density is low, less than 103^3 cm−3^{-3}, over the entire galaxy. By fitting the SED of ARP 302N in the far infrared we obtain a dust temperature of TdT\rm_d=26-36 K and a dust mass of Mdust\rm _{dust}=2.0--3.6×108\times10^8 M⊙\rm_\odot. The spectral index of the radio continuum is around 0.9. The spatial distribution and spectral index of the radio continuum emission suggests that most of the radio continuum emission is synchrotron emission from the star forming regions at the nucleus and ARP302N-cm. The good spatial correspondance between the 3.6 cm radio continuum emission, the Spitzer 8 & 24 μ\mum data and the high resolution CO J=2-1 observation from the SMA shows that there is the asymmetrical star forming activities in ARP 302N.Comment: 19 pages, 8 figures, accepted by A

    Role of Electon Excitation and Nature of Molecular Gas in Cluster Central Elliptical Galaxies

    Get PDF
    We present observations in CO(3-2) that, combined with previous observations in CO(2-1), constrain the physical properties of the filamentary molecular gas in the central ∼\sim6.5 kpc of NGC 1275, the central giant elliptical galaxy of the Perseus cluster. We find this molecular gas to have a temperature ≳20\gtrsim 20 K and a density ∼\sim10210^2-104 cm−310^4 {\rm \ cm^{-3}}, typically warmer and denser than the bulk of Giant Molecular Clouds (GMCs) in the Galaxy. Bathed in the harsh radiation and particle field of the surrounding intracluster X-ray gas, the molecular gas likely has a much higher ionization fraction than that of GMCs. For an ionization fraction of ∼\sim10−410^{-4}, similar to that of Galactic diffuse (≲250 cm−3\lesssim 250 {\rm \ cm^{-3}}) partially-molecular clouds that emit in HCN(1-0) and HCO+^+(1-0), we show that the same gas traced in CO can produce the previously reported emissions in HCN(3-2), HCO+^+(3-2), and CN(2-1) from NGC 1275; the dominant source of excitation for all the latter molecules is collisions with electrons. To prevent collapse, as evidenced by the lack of star formation in the molecular filaments, they must consist of thin strands that have cross-sectional radii ≲\lesssim0.2-2 pc if supported solely by thermal gas pressure; larger radii are permissible if turbulence or poloidal magnetic fields provide additional pressure support. We point out that the conditions required to relate CO luminosities to molecular gas masses in our Galaxy are unlikely to apply in cluster central elliptical galaxies. Rather than being virialized structures analogous to GMCs, we propose that the molecular gas in NGC 1275 comprises pressure-confined structures created by turbulent flows.Comment: 41 pages, 1 table, 12 figures; accepted by Ap

    A Molecular Line Survey of the Carbon-Rich Proto-Planetary Nebula AFGL 2688 in the 3mm and 1.3mm Windows

    Get PDF
    We present a spectral line survey of the proto-planetary nebula AFGL 2688 in the frequency ranges of 71-111 GHz, 157-160 GHz, and 218-267 GHz using the Arizona Radio Observatory 12m telescope and the Heinrich Hertz Submillimeter Telescope. A total of 143 individual spectral features associated with 32 different molecular species and isotopologues were identified. The molecules C3H, CH3CN, H2CO, H2CS, and HCO+ were detected for the first time in this object. By comparing the integrated line strengths of different transitions, we are able to determine the rotation temperatures, column densities, and fractional abundances of the detected molecules. The C, O, and N isotopic ratios in AFGL 2688 are compared with those in IRC+10216 and the Sun, and were found to be consistent with stellar nucleosynthesis theory. Through comparisons of molecular line strengths in asymptotic giant branch stars, proto-planetary nebulae, and planetary nebulae, we discuss the evolution in circumstellar chemistry in the late stages of evolution.Comment: 41 pages, 10 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
    • …
    corecore