2 research outputs found
Flux Density Variations at 3.6 cm in the Massive Star-Forming Region W49A
A number of ultracompact H II regions in Galactic star forming environments
have been observed to vary significantly in radio flux density on timescales of
10-20 years. Theory predicted that such variations should occur when the
accretion flow that feeds a young massive star becomes unstable and clumpy. We
have targeted the massive star-forming region W49A with the Karl G. Jansky Very
Large Array (VLA) for observations at 3.6 cm with the B-configuration at 0.8''
resolution, to compare to nearly identical observations taken almost 21 years
earlier (February 2015 and August 1994). Most of the sources in the crowded
field of ultracompact and hypercompact H II regions exhibit no significant
changes over this time period. However, one source, W49A/G2, decreased by 20%
in peak intensity (from 71+/-4 mJy/beam to 57+/-3 mJy/beam), and 40% in
integrated flux (from 0.109+/-0.011 Jy to 0.067+/-0.007 Jy), where we cite 5
sigma errors in peak intensity, and 10% errors in integrated flux. We present
the radio images of the W49A region at the two epochs, the difference image
that indicates the location of the flux density decrease, and discuss
explanations for the flux density decrease near the position of W49A/G2.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication, The Astrophysical
Journal Letters, July 26, 201