[FZD2017] 189 , the SIMBAD biblio

2017A&A...600A..93F - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 600A, 93-93 (2017/4-1)

Star formation towards the Galactic H II region RCW 120. Herschel observations of compact sources.

FIGUEIRA M., ZAVAGNO A., DEHARVENG L., RUSSEIL D., ANDERSON L.D., MEN'SHCHIKOV A., SCHNEIDER N., HILL T., MOTTE F., MEGE P., LELEU G., ROUSSEL H., BERNARD J.-P., TRAFICANTE A., PARADIS D., TIGE J., ANDRE P., BONTEMPS S. and ABERGEL A.

Abstract (from CDS):

Context. The expansion of HII regions can trigger the formation of stars. An overdensity of young stellar objects is observed at the edges of HII regions but the mechanisms that give rise to this phenomenon are not clearly identified. Moreover, it is difficult to establish a causal link between HII -region expansion and the star formation observed at the edges of these regions. A clear age gradient observed in the spatial distribution of young sources in the surrounding might be a strong argument in favor of triggering.
Aims. We aim to characterize the star formation observed at the edges of HII regions by studying the properties of young stars that form there. We aim to detect young sources, derive their properties and their evolution stage in order to discuss the possible causal link between the first-generation massive stars that form the HII region and the young sources observed at their edges.
Methods. We have observed the Galactic HII region RCW 120 with Herschel PACS and SPIRE photometers at 70, 100, 160, 250, 350 and 500µm. We produced temperature and H2 column density maps and use the getsources algorithm to detect compact sources and measure their fluxes at Herschel wavelengths. We have complemented these fluxes with existing infrared data. Fitting their spectral energy distributions with a modified blackbody model, we derived their envelope dust temperature and envelope mass. We computed their bolometric luminosities and discuss their evolutionary stages.
Results. The overall temperatures of the region (without background subtraction) range from 15K to 24K. The warmest regions are observed towards the ionized gas. The coldest regions are observed outside the ionized gas and follow the emission of the cold material previously detected at 870µm and 1.3mm. The H2 column density map reveals the distribution of the cold medium to be organized in filaments and highly structured. Column densities range from 7x1021cm–2 up to 9x1023cm–2 without background subtraction. The cold regions observed outside the ionized gas are the densest and host star formation when the column density exceeds 2x1022cm–2. The most reliable 35 compact sources are discussed. Using existing CO data and morphological arguments we show that these sources are likely to be associated with the RCW 120 region. These sources' volume densities range from 2x105cm–3 to 108cm–3. Five sources have envelope masses larger than 50 M and are all observed in high column density regions (>7x1022cm–2). We find that the evolutionary stage of the sources primarily depends on the density of their hosting condensation and is not correlated with the distance to the ionizing star.
Conclusions. The Herschel data, with their unique sampling of the far infrared domain, have allowed us to characterize the properties of compact sources observed towards RCW 120 for the first time. We have also been able to determine the envelope temperature, envelope mass and evolutionary stage of these sources. Using these properties we have shown that the density of the condensations that host star formation is a key parameter of the star-formation history, irrespective of their projected distance to the ionizing stars.

Abstract Copyright: © ESO, 2017

Journal keyword(s): H II regions - stars: formation - ISM: individual objects: RCW 120 - ISM: individual objects: RCW 120

VizieR on-line data: <Available at CDS (J/A+A/600/A93): tablea1.dat>

Nomenclature: Table A.1: [FZD2017] NNN N=122 among (Nos 1-329).

Simbad objects: 132

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