scholarly journals A Dynamical and Chemical Study of NGC 6302

1983 ◽  
Vol 103 ◽  
pp. 509-509
Author(s):  
I.J. Danziger ◽  
D. Baade ◽  
P. D. Atherton ◽  
K. Taylor ◽  
A. Boksenberg

From five spectrograms obtained at five different positions in the nebula, relative ionic concentrations have been derived with respect to the nucleus. They show that the degree of excitation generally decreases with distance from the nucleus. But there are also areas with locally enhanced or attenuated excitation. Taurus data, a series of two-dimensional monochromatic images centered on (OIII) λ 5007, have been used to construct a two-dimensional velocity map. It shows a large-scale structure similar to the one of direct images with the biconical pattern being at least partly present. Areas of locally lower radial velocity which seem to be inversion symmetrically distributed with respect to the centre, are also distinguished. They do not have pronounced counterparts on direct images. The cavity model suggested by Barral et al. (1982, MNRAS 199, 95) for NGC 6302 and Icke's biconical flow model (1981, Ap. J. 247, 152) are discussed.

1994 ◽  
Vol 140 ◽  
pp. 234-235
Author(s):  
J. J. Wiseman ◽  
P. T. P. Ho

Clumps and filamentary structures have previously been observed in the extended molecular ridge of OMC-1 (see below). The region is affected by multiple outflow components, shock emission that extends 0.5 pc from the BN/KL core, and a foreground HII region expanding into the cloud. The region also displays a complex kinematical character, with a large scale shift in radial velocity along the ridge, multiple cloud velocity components (Womack et al. 1993), and fast gradients across constituent cores (Harris et al. 1983, Wiseman and Ho 1993).To clarify the structure and kinematics of the region, we have used the VLA to observe with high (0.3 km s−1) velocity resolution and high (8”) angular resolution the NH3 (1,1) and (2,2) rotation-inversion lines over 20 adjacent fields covering a 3’ by 8’ region encompassing the KL region.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document