1999A&A...342..257K -
Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 342, 257-270 (1999/2-1)
Depletion of CO in a cold dense cloud core of IC 5146.
KRAMER C., ALVES J., LADA C.J., LADA E.A., SIEVERS A., UNGERECHTS H. and WALMSLEY C.M.
Abstract (from CDS):
We have used the IRAM 30m telescope to map the C18O(1->0) and (2->1) transitions in a region of 0.5x0.5pc2 (200''x200'') in the nearby (460pc distance) molecular cloud IC5146 at resolutions of down to 0.025pc. Additionally, we have observed the corresponding C17O transitions towards 24 positions in the central region of the cloud as a check on optical depth effects. On the basis of these observations, we conclude that the C18O emission observed by us is optically thin and that the observed C18O(2->1)/(1->0) ratio is consistent with gas at 10 K and density in the range 104 to 105 cm–3. We have estimated C18O column densities over the region mapped, using an LVG program to correct for excitation effects, and have compared them, at the same spatial resolution of 30'', with the dust extinction derived from the NIR images of Lada et al. (1998ApJ...495..871L) From this, we find a roughly constant, though with considerable dispersion, ratio of C18O column density to visual extinction (AV) in directions with AV less than ∼10 magnitudes. The ratio is compatible with previous determinations of the [C18O]/[H2] abundance ratio, e.g. 1.7*10–7 as obtained by Frerking et al. (1982) At extinctions higher than ∼10 magnitudes, however, there is a systematic fall-off in the ratio N(C18O)/AV which we attribute to depletion of C18O onto dust ice mantles within the dense, n>104cm–3, and cold, Tdust≲15K, Tgas∼10K, core interior. This fall-off is also seen, though with less statistical significance, in our observed dependence of N(C17O)/AV with AV. We thus think it unlikely that optical depth effects are influencing our conclusions. We have additionally made pointed C18O(1->0) and (2->1) observations towards 94 background stars with extinction greater than 10 magnitudes from the study of Lada et al. (1994ApJ...429..694L) These in general confirm our mapping results.
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Syntax of coordinates is : "ra dec (wtype) [error ellipse] quality bibcode" :
ra dec : right ascension and declination (unit and frame defined according to your Output Options)
Grey values are increasing the original precision due to the computation of frame transformations
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21 51 33.5 +47 00 35
[
]
Syntax of coordinates is : "ra dec (wtype) [error ellipse] quality bibcode" :
ra dec : right ascension and declination (unit and frame defined according to your Output Options)
Grey values are increasing the original precision due to the computation of frame transformations
(wtype) : wavelength class for the origin of the coordinates (Rad, mm, IR, Optical, UV, Xray, Gam)
[error ellipse] : measurement uncertainty, on (ra,dec) if the positional angle is 90 degrees, on (majaxis,minaxis) otherwise (in mas at defined epoch in the original catalogue),
position angle (in degrees North celestial pole to East)
quality : flag of quality
E ≥ 10"
D : 1-10" (and some old data)
C : 0.1-1"
B : 0.01-0.1" + 2MASS, Tyc
A : VLBI, Hipparcos
bibcode : bibcode of the coordinates reference
Gal
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094.3820 -05.5204
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References (464 between 1850 and 2024) (Total 464)
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Notes (1) :
message of Brent A. Archinal (27.12.2005):
``the IC makes no mention of a star cluster here, and neither do the discoverersof the IC 5146 nebula (the "Cocoon Nebula"), Espin (1900) and Wolf (1904).Collinder appears to have been the first to identify a star cluster here(even though he also used the IC 5146 name incorrectly), so the preferred namewould seem to be Collinder 470. Details of this are given in Brent A. Archinaland Steven's Hynes book "Star Clusters", pp. 127-128.
''
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