SIMBAD references

2017A&A...599A.121D - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 599A, 121-121 (2017/3-1)

Glycolaldehyde in Perseus young solar analogs.

DE SIMONE M., CODELLA C., TESTI L., BELLOCHE A., MAURY A.J., ANDERL S., ANDRE P., MARET S. and PODIO L.

Abstract (from CDS):

Context. The earliest evolutionary stages of low-mass protostars are characterised by the so-called hot-corino stage, when the newly born star heats the surrounding material and enrich the gas chemically. Studying this evolutionary phase of solar protostars may help understand the evolution of prebiotic complex molecules in the development of planetary systems.
Aims. In this paper we focus on the occurrence of glycolaldehyde (HCOCH2OH) in young solar analogs by performing the first homogeneous and unbiased study of this molecule in the Class 0 protostars of the nearby Perseus star forming region.
Methods. We obtained sub-arcsec angular resolution maps at 1.3mm and 1.4mm of glycolaldehyde emission lines using the IRAM Plateau de Bure (PdB) interferometer in the framework of the CALYPSO IRAM large program.
Results. Glycolaldehyde has been detected towards 3 Class 0 and 1 Class I protostars out of the 13 continuum sources targeted in Perseus: NGC 1333-IRAS2A1, NGC 1333-IRAS4A2, NGC 1333-IRAS4B1, and SVS13-A. The NGC 1333 star forming region looks particularly glycolaldehyde rich, with a rate of occurrence up to 60%. The glycolaldehyde spatial distribution overlaps with the continuum one, tracing the inner 100 au around the protostar. A large number of lines (up to 18), with upper-level energies Eu from 37K up to 375K has been detected. We derived column densities ≥1015 cm–2 and rotational temperatures Trot between 115K and 236K, imaging for the first time hot-corinos around NGC 1333-IRAS4B1 and SVS13-A.
Conclusions. In multiple systems glycolaldehyde emission is detected only in one component. The case of the SVS13-A+B and IRAS4-A1+A2 systems support that the detection of glycolaldehyde (at least in the present Perseus sample) indicates older protostars (i.e. SVS13-A and IRAS4-A2), evolved enough to develop the hot-corino region (i.e. 100K in the inner 100 au). However, only two systems do not allow us to firmly conclude whether the primary factor leading to the detection of glycolaldehyde emission is the environments hosting the protostars, evolution (e.g. low value of Lsubmm/Lint), or accretion luminosity (high Lint).

Abstract Copyright: © ESO, 2017

Journal keyword(s): stars: formation - ISM: jets and outflows - ISM: molecules - ISM: molecules

VizieR on-line data: <Available at CDS (J/A+A/599/A121): list.dat fits/*>

Simbad objects: 29

goto Full paper

goto View the references in ADS

To bookmark this query, right click on this link: simbad:2017A&A...599A.121D and select 'bookmark this link' or equivalent in the popup menu