2,491 research outputs found
High-Resolution 4.7 Micron Keck/NIRSPEC Spectroscopy of the CO Emission from the Disks Surrounding Herbig Ae Stars
We explore the high-resolution (λ/Δλ = 25,000; Δv = 12 km s^(-1)) M-band (4.7-5.1 μm) spectra of several disk-dominated Herbig Ae (HAe) systems: AB Aur, MWC 758, MWC 480, HD 163296, and VV Ser. All five objects show ^(12)CO v = 1-0 emission lines up to J = 42, but there is little or no evidence of moderate-J, v = 2-1 transitions despite their similar excitation energies. AB Aur shows ^(13)CO emission as well. The line/continuum ratios and intensity profiles are well correlated with inclination, and they trace collisionally driven emission from the inner disk (R_(th) ≾ 0.5-1 AU) as well as resonance fluorescence to much larger radii (R_(hν) ≾ 50-100 AU for J ≾ 10). The temperature, density, and radiation field profiles required to fit the CO emission are in good agreement with models of HAe disks derived from their spectral energy distributions. High-resolution and high dynamic range infrared spectroscopy of CO, and future observations of less abundant species, thus provide direct access to the physicochemical properties and surface structure of disks in regions where planet formation likely occurs
The CO and CO Absorption Bands as Tracers of the Thermal History of Interstellar Icy Grain Mantles
Analyses of infrared signatures of CO in water dominated ices in the ISM
can give information on the physical state of CO in icy grains and on the
thermal history of the ices themselves. In many sources, CO was found in
the `pure' crystalline form, as signatured by the splitting in the bending mode
absorption profile. To a large extent, pure CO is likely to have formed
from segregation of CO from a CO:HO mixture during thermal
processing. Previous laboratory studies quantified the temperature dependence
of segregation, but no systematic measurement of the concentration dependence
of segregation is available. In this study, we measured both the temperature
dependence and concentration dependence of CO segregation in CO:HO
mixtures, and found that no pure crystalline CO forms if the CO:HO
ratio is less than 23%. Therefore the segregation of CO is not always a
good thermal tracer of the ice mantle. We found that the position and width of
the broad component of the asymmetric stretching vibrational mode of
CO change linearly with the temperature of CO:HO mixtures,
but are insensitive to the concentration of CO. We recommend using this
mode, which will be observable towards low mass protostellar envelopes and
dense clouds with the James Webb Space Telescope, to trace the thermal history
of the ice mantle, especially when segregated CO is unavailable. We used
the laboratory measured CO profile to analyze the ISO-SWS
observations of ice mantles towards Young Stellar Objects, and the
astrophysical implications are discussed.Comment: 11 pages, 12 figures, ApJ accepte
Methane Abundance Variations toward the Massive Protostar NGC 7538 : IRS9
Absorption and emission lines originating from the nu3 C-H stretching
manifold of gas phase CH4 were discovered in the high resolution (R=25,000)
infrared L band spectrum along the line of sight toward NGC 7538 : IRS9. These
observations provide a diagnostic of the complex dynamics and chemistry in a
massive star forming region. The line shapes resemble P Cygni profiles with the
absorption and emission components shifted by ~7 km/s with respect to the
systemic velocity. Similar velocity components were observed in CO at 4.7 um,
but in contrast to CH4, the CO shows deep absorption due to a high velocity
outflow as well as absorption at the systemic velocity due to the cold outer
envelope. It is concluded that the gas phase CH4 abundance varies by an order
of magnitude in this line of sight: it is low in the envelope and the outflow
(X[CH4]<0.4e-6), and at least a factor of 10 larger in the central core. The
discovery of solid CH4 in independent ground and space based data sets shows
that methane is nearly entirely frozen onto grains in the envelope. It thus
appears that CH4 is formed by grain surface reactions, evaporates into the gas
phase in the warm inner regions of protostellar cores and is efficiently
destroyed in shocks related to outflows.Comment: Scheduled for publication in ApJ 615, 01 Nov. 2004. 11 page
Polarisation observations of VY Canis Majoris H_2O 5_(32)–4_(41) 620.701 GHz maser emission with HIFI
Context. Water vapour maser emission from evolved oxygen-rich stars remains poorly understood. Additional observations, including polarisation studies and simultaneous observation of different maser transitions may ultimately lead to greater insight.
Aims. We have aimed to elucidate the nature and structure of the VY CMa water vapour masers in part by observationally testing a theoretical prediction of the relative strengths of the 620.701 GHz and the 22.235 GHz maser components of ortho H_2O.
Methods. In its high-resolution mode (HRS) the Herschel Heterodyne Instrument for the Far Infrared (HIFI) offers a frequency resolution of 0.125 MHz, corresponding to a line-of-sight velocity of 0.06 km s^(-1), which we employed to obtain the strength and linear polarisation of maser spikes in the spectrum of VY CMa at 620.701 GHz. Simultaneous ground based observations of the 22.235 GHz maser with the Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie 100-m telescope at Effelsberg, provided a ratio of 620.701 GHz to 22.235 GHz emission.
Results. We report the first astronomical detection to date of H_2O maser emission at 620.701 GHz. In VY CMa both the 620.701 and the 22.235 GHz polarisation are weak. At 620.701 GHz the maser peaks are superposed on what appears to be a broad emission component, jointly ejected from the star. We observed the 620.701 GHz emission at two epochs 21 days apart, both to measure the potential direction of linearly polarised maser components and to obtain a measure of the longevity of these components. Although we do not detect significant polarisation levels in the core of the line, they rise up to approximately 6% in its wings
A Spitzer-IRS Detection of Crystalline Silicates in a Protostellar Envelope
We present the Spitzer Space Telescope Infrared Spectrograph spectrum of the
Orion A protostar HOPS-68. The mid-infrared spectrum reveals crystalline
substructure at 11.1, 16.1, 18.8, 23.6, 27.9, and 33.6 microns superimposed on
the broad 9.7 and 18 micron amorphous silicate features; the substructure is
well matched by the presence of the olivine end-member forsterite. Crystalline
silicates are often observed as infrared emission features around the
circumstellar disks of Herbig Ae/Be stars and T Tauri stars. However, this is
the first unambiguous detection of crystalline silicate absorption in a cold,
infalling, protostellar envelope. We estimate the crystalline mass fraction
along the line-of-sight by first assuming that the crystalline silicates are
located in a cold absorbing screen and secondly by utilizing radiative transfer
models. The resulting crystalline mass fractions of 0.14 and 0.17,
respectively, are significantly greater than the upper limit found in the
interstellar medium (< 0.02-0.05). We propose that the amorphous silicates were
annealed within the hot inner disk and/or envelope regions and subsequently
transported outward into the envelope by entrainment in a protostellar outflowComment: Accepted to Astrophysical Journal Letters, 2011 April 19: 6 pages, 3
figures, 2 table
High-Resolution 4.7 Micron Keck/NIRSPEC Spectra of Protostars. II. Detection of the ^(13)CO Isotope in Icy Grain Mantles
The high-resolution (R = 25,000) infrared M-band spectrum of the massive protostar NGC 7538 IRS 9 shows a narrow absorption feature at 4.779 μm (2092.3 cm^(-1)) that we attribute to the vibrational stretching mode of the ^(13)CO isotope in pure CO icy grain mantles. This is the first detection of ^(13)CO in icy grain mantles in the interstellar medium. The ^(13)CO band is a factor of 2.3 narrower than the apolar component of the ^(12)CO band. With this in mind, we discuss the mechanisms that broaden solid-state absorption bands. It is shown that ellipsoidally shaped pure CO grains fit the bands of both isotopes at the same time. Slightly worse but still reasonable fits are also obtained by CO embedded in N_2-rich ices and thermally processed O_2-rich ices. In addition, we report new insights into the nature and evolution of interstellar CO ices by comparing the very high resolution multicomponent solid ^(12)CO spectrum of NGC 7538 IRS 9 with that of the previously studied low-mass source L1489 IRS. The narrow absorption of apolar CO ices is present in both spectra but much stronger in NGC 7538 IRS 9. It is superposed on a smooth broad absorption feature well fitted by a combination of CO_2 and H_2O-rich laboratory CO ices. The abundances of the latter two ices, scaled to the total H_2O ice column, are the same in both sources. We thus suggest that thermal processing manifests itself as evaporation of apolar ices only and not the formation of CO_2 or polar ices. Finally, the decomposition of the ^(12)CO band is used to derive the ^(12)CO/^(13)CO abundance ratio in apolar ices. A ratio of ^(12)CO/^(13)CO = 71 ± 15 (3 σ) is deduced, in good agreement with gas-phase CO studies (~77) and the solid ^(12)CO_2/^(13)CO_2 ratio of 80 ± 11 found in the same line of sight. The implications for the chemical path along which CO_2 is formed are discussed
CO Rovibrational Emission as a Probe of Inner Disk Structure
We present an analysis of CO emission lines from a sample of T Tauri, Herbig Ae/Be, and transitional disks with known inclinations in order to study the structure of inner disk molecular gas. We calculate CO inner radii by fitting line profiles with a simple parameterized model. We find that, for optically thick disks, CO inner radii are strongly correlated with the total system luminosity (stellar plus accretion) and consistent with the dust sublimation radius. Transitional disk inner radii show the same trend with luminosity, but are systematically larger. Using rotation diagram fits, we derive, for classical T Tauri disks, emitting areas consistent with a ring of width ~0.15 AU located at the CO inner radius; emitting areas for transitional disks are systematically smaller. We also measure lower rotational temperatures for transitional disks, and disks around Herbig Ae/Be stars, than for those around T Tauri stars. Finally, we find that rotational temperatures are similar to, or slightly lower than, the expected temperature of blackbody grains located at the CO inner radius, in contrast to expectations of thermal decoupling between gas and dust
Detection of Extremely Broad Water Emission from the molecular cloud interacting Supernova Remnant G349.7+0.2
We performed Herschel HIFI, PACS and SPIRE observations towards the molecular
cloud interacting supernova remnant G349.7+0.2. An extremely broad emission
line was detected at 557 GHz from the ground state transition 1_{10}-1_{01} of
ortho-water. This water line can be separated into three velocity components
with widths of 144, 27 and 4 km/s. The 144 km/s component is the broadest water
line detected to date in the literature. This extremely broad line width shows
importance of probing shock dynamics. PACS observations revealed 3 additional
ortho-water lines, as well as numerous high-J carbon monoxide (CO) lines. No
para-water lines were detected. The extremely broad water line is indicative of
a high velocity shock, which is supported by the observed CO rotational diagram
that was reproduced with a J-shock model with a density of 10^4 cm^{-3} and a
shock velocity of 80 km/s. Two far-infrared fine-structure lines, [O~I] at 145
micron and [C~II] line at 157 micron, are also consistent with the high
velocity J-shock model. The extremely broad water line could be simply from
short-lived molecules that have not been destroyed in high velocity J-shocks;
however, it may be from more complicated geometry such as high-velocity water
bullets or a shell expanding in high velocity. We estimate the CO and H2O
densities, column densities, and temperatures by comparison with RADEX and
detailed shock models. Detection of Extremely Broad Water Emission from the
molecular cloud interacting Supernova Remnant G349.7+0.
AKARI observations of ice absorption bands towards edge-on young stellar objects
To investigate the composition and evolution of circumstellar ice around low-mass young stellar objects (YSOs), we observed ice absorption bands in the near infrared (NIR) towards eight YSOs ranging from class 0 to class II, among which seven are associated with edge-on disks. We performed slit-less spectroscopic observations using the grism mode of the InfraRed Camera (IRC) on board AKARI, which enables us to obtain full NIR spectra from 2.5 mu m to 5 mu m, including the CO2 band and the blue wing of the H2O band, which are inaccessible from the ground. We developed procedures to carefully process the spectra of targets with nebulosity. The spectra were fitted with polynomial baselines to derive the absorption spectra. The molecular absorption bands were then fitted with the laboratory database of ice absorption bands, considering the instrumental line profile and the spectral resolution of the grism dispersion element. Towards the class 0-I sources (L1527, IRC-L1041-2, and IRAS 04302), absorption bands of H2O, CO2, CO, and XCN are clearly detected. Column density ratios of CO2 ice and CO ice relative to H2O ice are 21-28% and 13-46%, respectively. If XCN is OCN-, its column density is as high as 2-6% relative to H2O ice. The HDO ice feature at 4.1 mu m is tentatively detected towards the class 0-I sources and HV Tau. Non-detections of the CH-stretching mode features around 3.5 mu m provide upper limits to the CH3OH abundance of 26% (L1527) and 42% (IRAS 04302) relative to H2O. We tentatively detect OCS ice absorption towards IRC-L1041-2. Towards class 0-I sources, the detected features should mostly originate in the cold envelope, while CO gas and OCN-could originate in the region close to the protostar, where there are warm temperatures and UV radiation. We detect H2O ice band towards ASR41 and 2MASSJ 1628137-243139, which are edge-on class II disks. We also detect H2O ice and CO2 ice towards HV Tau, HK Tau, and UY Aur, and tentatively detect CO gas features towards HK Tau and UY Aur
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