SIMBAD references

2015A&A...584A..36G - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 584A, 36-36 (2015/12-1)

Squeezed between shells? The origin of the Lupus I molecular cloud. APEX/LABOCA, Herschel, and Planck observations.

GACZKOWSKI B., PREIBISCH T., STANKE T., KRAUSE M.G.H., BURKERT A., DIEHL R., FIERLINGER K., KROELL D., NGOUMOU J. and ROCCATAGLIATA V.

Abstract (from CDS):

The Lupus I cloud is found between the Upper Scorpius (USco) and the Upper Centaurus-Lupus (UCL) subgroups of the Scorpius-Centaurus OB association, where the expanding USco HI shell appears to interact with a bubble currently driven by the winds of the remaining B-stars of UCL. We want to study how collisions of large-scale interstellar gas flows form and influence new dense clouds in the ISM. We performed LABOCA continuum sub-mm observations of Lupus I that provide for the first time a direct view of the densest, coldest cloud clumps and cores at high angular resolution. We complemented these data with Herschel and Planck data from which we constructed column density and temperature maps. From the Herschel and LABOCA column density maps we calculated probability density functions (PDFs) to characterize the density structure of the cloud. The northern part of Lupus I is found to have, on average, lower densities, higher temperatures, and no active star formation. The center-south part harbors dozens of pre-stellar cores where density and temperature reach their maximum and minimum, respectively. Our analysis of the column density PDFs from the Herschel data show double-peak profiles for all parts of the cloud, which we attribute to an external compression. In those parts with active star formation, the PDF shows a power-law tail at high densities. The PDFs we calculated from our LABOCA data trace the denser parts of the cloud showing one peak and a power-law tail. With LABOCA we find 15 cores with masses between 0.07 and 1.71M and a total mass of ≃8M. The total gas and dust mass of the cloud is ≃164M and hence ∼5% of the mass is in cores. From the Herschel and Planck data we find a total mass of ≃174M and ≃171M, respectively. The position, orientation, and elongated shape of Lupus I, the double-peak PDFs and the population of pre-stellar and protostellar cores could be explained by the large-scale compression from the advancing USco HI shell and the UCL wind bubble.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): stars: formation - stars: protostars - ISM: bubbles - ISM: clouds - dust, extinction

Nomenclature: Table 3: [GPS2015] NN (Nos 1-15).

Simbad objects: 30

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