SIMBAD references

2007A&A...466..977S - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 466, 977-988 (2007/5-2)

Tracing high energy radiation with molecular lines near deeply embedded protostars.

STAEUBER P., BENZ A.O., JORGENSEN J.K., VAN DISHOECK E.F., DOTY S.D. and VAN DER TAK F.F.S.

Abstract (from CDS):

The aim is to probe high energy radiation emitted by deeply embedded protostars.Submillimeter lines of CN, NO, CO+ and SO+, and upper limits on SH+ and N2O are observed with the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope in two high-mass and up to nine low-mass young stellar objects and compared with chemical models.Constant fractional abundances derived from radiative transfer modeling of the line strengths are x(CN) ≃ a fewx10–11-10–8, x(NO) ≃10–9-10–8 and x(CO+) ≃10–12-10–10. SO+ has abundances of a fewx10–11 in the high-mass objects and upper limits of ≃10–12-10–11 in the low-mass sources. All abundances are up to 1-2 orders of magnitude higher if the molecular emission is assumed to originate mainly from the inner region (≲1000AU) of the envelope. For high-mass sources, the CN, SO+ and CO+ abundances and abundance ratios are best explained by an enhanced far-ultraviolet (FUV) field impacting gas at temperatures of a few hundred K. The observed column densities require that this region of enhanced FUV has scales comparable to the observing beam, such as in a geometry in which the enhanced FUV irradiates outflow walls. For low-mass sources, the required temperatures within the FUV models of T>300K are much higher than found in models, so that an X-ray enhanced region close to the protostar (r ≲500AU) is more plausible. Gas-phase chemical models produce more NO than observed, suggesting an additional reduction mechanism not included in current models.The observed CN, CO+ and SO+ abundances can be explained with either enhanced X-rays or FUV fields from the central source. High-mass sources likely have low opacity regions that allow the FUV photons to reach large distances from the central source. X-rays are suggested to be more effective than FUV fields in the low-mass sources. The observed abundances imply X-ray fluxes for the Class 0 objects of LX≃1029-1031erg/s, comparable to those observed from low-mass Class I protostars. Spatially resolved data are needed to clearly distinguish the effects of FUV and X-rays for individual species.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): stars: formation - stars: low-mass, brown dwarfs - ISM: molecules - X-rays: ISM

Simbad objects: 18

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