1,859 research outputs found
Young starless cores embedded in the magnetically dominated Pipe Nebula. II. Extended dataset
The Pipe nebula is a massive, nearby, filamentary dark molecular cloud with a
low star-formation efficiency threaded by a uniform magnetic field
perpendicular to its main axis. It harbors more than a hundred, mostly
quiescent, very chemically young starless cores. The cloud is, therefore, a
good laboratory to study the earliest stages of the star-formation process. We
aim to investigate the primordial conditions and the relation among physical,
chemical, and magnetic properties in the evolution of low-mass starless cores.
We used the IRAM 30-m telescope to map the 1.2 mm dust continuum emission of
five new starless cores, which are in good agreement with previous visual
extinction maps. For the sample of nine cores, which includes the four cores
studied in a previous work, we derived a Av to NH2 factor of
(1.270.12) mag cm and a background visual extinction
of ~6.7 mag possibly arising from the cloud material. We derived an average
core diameter of ~0.08 pc, density of ~10 cm, and mass of ~1.7 Msun.
Several trends seem to exist related to increasing core density: (i) diameter
seems to shrink, (ii) mass seems to increase, and (iii) chemistry tends to be
richer. No correlation is found between the direction of the surrounding
diffuse medium magnetic field and the projected orientation of the cores,
suggesting that large scale magnetic fields seem to play a secondary role in
shaping the cores. The full abstract is available in the pdf.Comment: 19 pages, 12 figures, 13 tables, accepted for publication in Ap
Systematic Molecular Differentiation in Starless Cores
(Abridged) We present evidence that low-mass starless cores, the simplest
units of star formation, are systematically differentiated in their chemical
composition. Molecules including CO and CS almost vanish near the core centers,
where the abundance decreases by one or two orders of magnitude. At the same
time, N2H+ has a constant abundance, and the fraction of NH3 increases toward
the core center. Our conclusions are based on a study of 5 mostly-round
starless cores (L1498, L1495, L1400K, L1517B, and L1544), which we have
mappedin C18O(1-0), C17O(1-0), CS(2-1), C34S(2-1), N2H+(1-0), NH3(1,1) and
(2,2), and the 1.2 mm continuum. For each core we have built a model that fits
simultaneously the radial profile of all observed emission and the central
spectrum for the molecular lines. The observed abundance drops of CO and CS are
naturally explained by the depletion of these molecules onto dust grains at
densities of 2-6 10^4 cm-3. N2H+ seems unaffected by this process up to
densities of several 10^5, while the NH3 abundance may be enhanced by reactions
triggered by the disappearance of CO from the gas phase. With the help of our
models, we show that chemical differentiation automatically explains the
discrepancy between the sizes of CS and NH3 maps, a problem which has remained
unexplained for more than a decade. Our models, in addition, show that a
combination of radiative transfer effects can give rise to the previously
observed discrepancy in the linewidth of these two tracers. Although this
discrepancy has been traditionally interpreted as resulting from a systematic
increase of the turbulent linewidth with radius, our models show that it can
arise in conditions of constant gas turbulence.Comment: 25 pages, 9 figures, accepted by Ap
Young starless cores embedded in the magnetically dominated Pipe Nebula
The Pipe Nebula is a massive, nearby dark molecular cloud with a low
star-formation efficiency which makes it a good laboratory to study the very
early stages of the star formation process. The Pipe Nebula is largely
filamentary, and appears to be threaded by a uniform magnetic field at scales
of few parsecs, perpendicular to its main axis. The field is only locally
perturbed in a few regions, such as the only active cluster forming core B59.
The aim of this study is to investigate primordial conditions in low-mass
pre-stellar cores and how they relate to the local magnetic field in the cloud.
We used the IRAM 30-m telescope to carry out a continuum and molecular survey
at 3 and 1 mm of early- and late-time molecules toward four selected starless
cores inside the Pipe Nebula. We found that the dust continuum emission maps
trace better the densest regions than previous 2MASS extinction maps, while
2MASS extinction maps trace better the diffuse gas. The properties of the cores
derived from dust emission show average radii of ~0.09 pc, densities of
~1.3x10^5 cm^-3, and core masses of ~2.5 M_sun. Our results confirm that the
Pipe Nebula starless cores studied are in a very early evolutionary stage, and
present a very young chemistry with different properties that allow us to
propose an evolutionary sequence. All of the cores present early-time molecular
emission, with CS detections toward all the sample. Two of them, Cores 40 and
109, present strong late-time molecular emission. There seems to be a
correlation between the chemical evolutionary stage of the cores and the local
magnetic properties that suggests that the evolution of the cores is ruled by a
local competition between the magnetic energy and other mechanisms, such as
turbulence.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. 15 pages, 5 figures, 9 table
Spatially Resolved Chemistry in Nearby Galaxies I. The Center of IC 342
We have imaged emission from the millimeter lines of eight molecules--C2H,
C34S, N2H+, CH3OH, HNCO, HNC, HC3N, and SO--in the central half kpc of the
nearby spiral galaxy IC 342. The 5" (~50 pc) resolution images were made with
OVRO. Using these maps we obtain a picture of the chemistry within the nuclear
region on the sizescales of individual GMCs. Bright emission is detected from
all but SO. There are marked differences in morphology for the different
molecules. A principal component analysis is performed to quantify similarities
and differences among the images. This analysis reveals that while all
molecules are to zeroth order correlated, that is, they are all found in dense
molecular clouds, there are three distinct groups of molecules distinguished by
the location of their emission within the nuclear region. N2H+, C18O, HNC and
HCN are widespread and bright, good overall tracers of dense molecular gas. C2H
and C34S, tracers of PDR chemistry, originate exclusively from the central
50-100 pc region, where radiation fields are high. The third group of
molecules, CH3OH and HNCO, correlates well with the expected locations of
bar-induced orbital shocks. The good correlation of HNCO with the established
shock tracer molecule CH3OH is evidence that this molecule, whose chemistry has
been uncertain, is indeed produced by processing of grains. HC3N is observed to
correlate tightly with 3mm continuum emission, demonstrating that the young
starbursts are the sites of the warmest and densest molecular gas. We compare
our HNC images with the HCN images of Downes et al. (1992) to produce the first
high resolution, extragalactic HCN/HNC map: the HNC/HCN ratio is near unity
across the nucleus and the correlation of both of these gas tracers with the
star formation is excellent. (Abridged).Comment: 54 pages including 10 figures and 8 tables. Accepted for publication
in Ap
Observing a column-dependent zeta in dense interstellar sources: the case of the Horsehead Nebula
Context: Observations of small carbon-bearing molecules such as CCH, C4H,
c-C3H2, and HCO in the Horsehead Nebula have shown these species to have higher
abundances towards the edge of the source than towards the center.
Aims: Given the determination of a wide range of values for zeta (s-1), the
total ionization rate of hydrogen atoms, and the proposal of a column-dependent
zeta(N_H), where N_H is the total column of hydrogen nuclei, we desire to
determine if the effects of zeta(N_H) in a single object with spatial variation
can be observable. We chose the Horsehead Nebula because of its geometry and
high density.
Method: We model the Horsehead Nebula as a near edge-on photon dominated
region (PDR), using several choices for zeta, both constant and as a function
of column. The column-dependent zeta functions are determined by a Monte Carlo
model of cosmic ray penetration, using a steep power-law spectrum and
accounting for ionization and magnetic field effects. We consider a case with
low-metal elemental abundances as well as a sulfur-rich case.
Results: We show that use of a column-dependent zeta(N_H) of 5(-15) s-1 at
the surface and 7.5(-16) s-1 at Av = 10 on balance improves agreement between
measured and theoretical molecular abundances, compared with constant values of
zeta.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, 5 tables, accepted in A&
Sensitivity of a tonne-scale NEXT detector for neutrinoless double beta decay searches
The Neutrino Experiment with a Xenon TPC (NEXT) searches for the neutrinoless
double-beta decay of Xe-136 using high-pressure xenon gas TPCs with
electroluminescent amplification. A scaled-up version of this technology with
about 1 tonne of enriched xenon could reach in less than 5 years of operation a
sensitivity to the half-life of neutrinoless double-beta decay decay better
than 1E27 years, improving the current limits by at least one order of
magnitude. This prediction is based on a well-understood background model
dominated by radiogenic sources. The detector concept presented here represents
a first step on a compelling path towards sensitivity to the parameter space
defined by the inverted ordering of neutrino masses, and beyond.Comment: 22 pages, 11 figure
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