73 research outputs found

    High Resolution CO Observations of Massive Star Forming Regions

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    Context. To further understand the processes involved in the formation of massive stars, we have undertaken a study of the gas dynamics surrounding three massive star forming regions. By observing the large scale structures at high resolution, we are able to determine properties such as driving source, and spatially resolve the bulk dynamical properties of the gas such as infall and outflow. Aims. With high resolution observations, we are able to determine which of the cores in a cluster forming massive stars is responsible for the large scale structures. Methods. We present CO observations of three massive star forming regions with known HII regions and show how the CO traces both infall and outflow. By combining data taken in two SMA configurations with JCMT observations, we are able to see large scale structures at high resolution. Results. We find large (0.26-0.40 pc), massive (2-3 M_sun) and energetic (13-17 \times 10^44 erg) outflows emanating from the edges of two HII regions suggesting they are being powered by the protostar(s) within. We find infall signatures in two of our sources with mass infall rates of order 10-4 M_sun/yr. Conclusions. We suggest that star formation is ongoing in these sources despite the presence of HII regions. We further conclude that the source(s) within a single HII region are responsible for the observed large scale structures; that these large structures are not the net effect of multiple outflows from multiple HII regions and hot cores.Comment: 8 pages,2 figures, accepted for publication in A&

    SN 2017ein and the Possible First Identification of a Type Ic Supernova Progenitor

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    We have identified a progenitor candidate in archival Hubble Space Telescope (HST) images for the Type Ic SN 2017ein in NGC 3938, pinpointing the candidate's location via HST Target-of-Opportunity imaging of the SN itself. This would be the first identification of a stellar-like object as a progenitor candidate for any Type Ic supernova to date. We also present observations of SN 2017ein during the first ~49 days since explosion. We find that SN 2017ein most resembles the well-studied Type Ic SN 2007gr. We infer that SN 2017ein experienced a total visual extinction of A_V~1.0--1.9 mag, predominantly because of dust within the host galaxy. Although the distance is not well known, if this object is the progenitor, it was likely of high initial mass, ~47--48 M_sun if a single star, or ~60--80 M_sun if in a binary system. However, we also find that the progenitor candidate could be a very blue and young compact cluster, further implying a very massive (>65 M_sun) progenitor. Furthermore, the actual progenitor might not be associated with the candidate at all and could be far less massive. From the immediate stellar environment, we find possible evidence for three different populations; if the SN progenitor was a member of the youngest population, this would be consistent with an initial mass of ~57 M_sun. After it has faded, the SN should be reobserved at high spatial resolution and sensitivity, to determine whether the candidate is indeed the progenitor.Comment: Revised, following referee's comments, and accepted to ApJ; 21 pages, 10 figure

    Spherical Infall in G10.6-0.4: Accretion Through an Ultracompact HII Region

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    We present high resolution (0.''12 x 0.''079) observations of the ultracompact HII region G10.6-0.4 in 23 GHz radio continuum and the NH3(3,3) line. Our data show that the infall in the molecular material is largely spherical, and does not flatten into a molecular disk at radii as small as 0.03 pc. The spherical infall in the molecular gas matches in location and velocity the infall seen in the ionized gas. We use a non-detection to place a stringent upper limit on the mass of an expanding molecular shell associated with pressure driven expansion of the HII region. These data support a scenario in which the molecular accretion flow passes through an ionization front and becomes an ionized accretion flow onto one or more main sequence stars, not the classical pressure-driven expansion scenario. In the continuum emission we see evidence for externally ionized clumps of molecular gas, and cavities evacuated by an outflow from the central source.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal Letter

    H_2D^+ in the High-mass Star-forming Region Cygnus X

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    H_2D^+ is a primary ion that dominates the gas-phase chemistry of cold dense gas. Therefore, it is hailed as a unique tool in probing the earliest, prestellar phase of star formation. Observationally, its abundance and distribution is, however, just beginning to be understood in low-mass prestellar and cluster-forming cores. In high-mass star-forming regions, H_2D^+ has been detected only in two cores, and its spatial distribution remains unknown. Here, we present the first map of the ortho-H_2D^+J_(k^+,k^-) = 1_(1,0) → 1_(1,1) and N_2H^+ 4-3 transition in the DR21 filament of Cygnus X with the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope, and N_2D^+ 3-2 and dust continuum with the Submillimeter Array. We have discovered five very extended (≤34, 000 AU diameter) weak structures in H2D+ in the vicinity of, but distinctly offset from, embedded protostars. More surprisingly, the H_2D^+ peak is not associated with either a dust continuum or N_2D^+ peak. We have therefore uncovered extended massive cold dense gas that was undetected with previous molecular line and dust continuum surveys of the region. This work also shows that our picture of the structure of cores is too simplistic for cluster-forming cores and needs to be refined: neither dust continuum with existing capabilities nor emission in tracers like N_2D^+ can provide a complete census of the total prestellar gas in such regions. Sensitive H_2D^+ mapping of the entire DR21 filament is likely to discover more of such cold quiescent gas reservoirs in an otherwise active high-mass star-forming region

    Methanol and excited OH masers towards W51: I - Main and South

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    MERLIN phase-referenced polarimetric observations towards the W51 complex were carried out in March 2006 in the Class II methanol maser transition at 6.668 GHz and three of the four excited OH maser hyperfine transitions at 6 GHz. Methanol maser emission is found towards both W51 Main and South. We did not detect any emission in the excited OH maser lines at 6.030 and 6.049 GHz down to a 3 sigma limit of ~20 mJy per beam. Excited OH maser emission at 6.035 GHz is only found towards W51 Main. This emission is highly circularly polarised (typically 45% and up to 87%). Seven Zeeman pairs were identified in this transition, one of which contains detectable linear polarisation. The magnetic field strength derived from these Zeeman pairs ranges from +1.6 to +6.8 mG, consistent with the previously published magnetic field strengths inferred from the OH ground-state lines. The bulk of the methanol maser emission is associated with W51 Main, sampling a total area of ~3"x2.2" (i.e., ~16200x11900 AU), while only two maser components, separated by ~2.5", are found in the W51 South region. The astrometric distributions of both 6.668-GHz methanol and 6.035-GHz excited-OH maser emission in the W51 Main/South region are presented here. The methanol masers in W51 Main show a clear coherent velocity and spatial structure with the bulk of the maser components distributed into 2 regions showing a similar conical opening angle with of a central velocity of ~+55.5 km/s and an expansion velocity of =<5 km/s. The mass contained in this structure is estimated to be at least 22 solar masses. The location of maser emission in the two afore-mentioned lines is compared with that of previously published OH ground-state emission. Association with the UCHII regions in the W51 Main/South complex and relationship of the masers to infall or outflow in the region are discussed.Comment: 19 pages, 16 figures and 4 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA
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