SIMBAD references

2019MNRAS.490.2056R - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 490, 2056-2070 (2019/December-1)

Illuminating the Tadpole's metamorphosis - I. MUSE observations of a small globule in a sea of ionizing photons.

REITER M., McLEOD A.F., KLAASSEN P.D., GUZMAN A.E., DALE J.E., MOTTRAM J.C. and GARAY G.

Abstract (from CDS):

We present new MUSE/VLT observations of a small globule in the Carina H II region that hosts the HH 900 jet+outflow system. Data were obtained with the GALACSI ground-layer adaptive optics system in wide-field mode, providing spatially resolved maps of diagnostic emission lines. These allow us to measure the variation of the physical properties in the globule and jet+outflow system. We find high temperatures (Te ≃ 104 K), modest extinction (AV ≃ 2.5 mag), and modest electron densities (ne ≃ 200 cm–3) in the ionized gas. Higher excitation lines trace the ionized outflow; both the excitation and ionization in the outflow increase with distance from the opaque globule. In contrast, lower excitation lines that are collisionally de-excited at densities >=104 cm–3 trace the highly collimated protostellar jet. Assuming the globule is an isothermal sphere confined by the pressure of the ionization front, we compute a Bonnor-Ebert mass of ∼3.7 M. This is two orders of magnitude higher than previous mass estimates, calling into question whether small globules like the Tadpole contribute to the bottom of the initial mass function. The derived globule properties are consistent with a cloud that has been and/or will be compressed by the ionization front on its surface. At the estimated globule photoevaporation rate of ∼5 x 10–7 M yr–1, the globule will be completely ablated in ∼7 Myr. Stars that form in globules like the Tadpole will emerge into the H II later and may help resolve some of the temporal tension between disc survival and enrichment.

Abstract Copyright: © 2019 The Author(s) Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society

Journal keyword(s): H ii regions - ISM: individual objects: NGC 3372 - ISM: jets and outflows

CDS comments: The Tadpole globule is [GG2014] 241 (in GRENMAN T. and GAHM G.F., 2014A&A...565A.107G) in Simbad.

Simbad objects: 15

goto Full paper

goto View the references in ADS

To bookmark this query, right click on this link: simbad:2019MNRAS.490.2056R and select 'bookmark this link' or equivalent in the popup menu