scholarly journals Submillimeter-wave observations of outflow and envelope around the low mass protostar IRAS 13036-7644

2006 ◽  
Vol 2 (S237) ◽  
pp. 432-432
Author(s):  
Kazuhisa Kamegai ◽  
Masaaki Hiramatsu ◽  
Takahiro Hayakawa ◽  
Ken'ichi Tatematsu ◽  
Tetsuo Hasegawa ◽  
...  

The interaction between molecular outflow from a protostar and ambient molecular cloud would play an important role in dissipating circumstellar envelope, changing chemical composition, and triggering next generation star formation. In order to investigate the interaction in submillimeter wavelength, we have made line observations toward the low mass protostar IRAS 13036-7644 (Class 0/I) in the Cha II dark cloud. Although millimeter observations found CO outflow and evidence of mass infall toward the protostar (e.g. Lehtinen 1997), no submillimeter observation has been reported so far.

1987 ◽  
Vol 115 ◽  
pp. 64-66
Author(s):  
Yoshio Tomita ◽  
Hiroshi Ohtani

To find evidence for collective star formation without massive stars in the dark cloud complex Kh141 (Saito 1980), a search for T-Tauri stars has been made.


2019 ◽  
Vol 625 ◽  
pp. A147 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Agúndez ◽  
N. Marcelino ◽  
J. Cernicharo ◽  
E. Roueff ◽  
M. Tafalla

An exhaustive chemical characterization of dense cores is mandatory to our understanding of chemical composition changes from a starless to a protostellar stage. However, only a few sources have had their molecular composition characterized in detail. Here we present a λ 3 mm line survey of L483, a dense core around a Class 0 protostar, which was observed with the IRAM 30 m telescope in the 80–116 GHz frequency range. We detected 71 molecules (140 including different isotopologs), most of which are present in the cold and quiescent ambient cloud according to their narrow lines (FWHM ~ 0.5 km s−1) and low rotational temperatures (≲10 K). Of particular interest among the detected molecules are the cis isomer of HCOOH, the complex organic molecules HCOOCH3, CH3OCH3, and C2H5OH, a wide variety of carbon chains, nitrogen oxides like N2O, and saturated molecules like CH3SH, in addition to eight new interstellar molecules (HCCO, HCS, HSC, NCCNH+, CNCN, NCO, H2NCO+, and NS+) whose detection has already been reported. In general, fractional molecular abundances in L483 are systematically lower than in TMC-1 (especially for carbon chains), tend to be higher than in L1544 and B1-b, and are similar to those in L1527. Apart from the overabundance of carbon chains in TMC-1, we find that L483 does not have a marked chemical differentiation with respect to starless/prestellar cores like TMC-1 and L1544, although it does chemically differentiate from Class 0 hot corino sources like IRAS 16293−2422. This fact suggests that the chemical composition of the ambient cloud of some Class 0 sources could be largely inherited from the dark cloud starless/prestellar phase. We explore the use of potential chemical evolutionary indicators, such as the HNCO/C3S, SO2/C2S, and CH3SH/C2S ratios, to trace the prestellar/protostellar transition. We also derived isotopic ratios for a variety of molecules, many of which show isotopic ratios close to the values for the local interstellar medium (remarkably all those involving 34S and 33S), while there are also several isotopic anomalies like an extreme depletion in 13C for one of the two isotopologs of c-C3H2, a drastic enrichment in 18O for SO and HNCO (SO being also largely enriched in 17O), and different abundances for the two 13C substituted species of C2H and the two 15N substituted species of N2H+. We report the first detection in space of some minor isotopologs like c-C3D. The exhaustive chemical characterization of L483 presented here, together with similar studies of other prestellar and protostellar sources, should allow us to identify the main factors that regulate the chemical composition of cores along the process of formation of low-mass protostars.


1994 ◽  
Vol 140 ◽  
pp. 60-61
Author(s):  
Takahiro Iwata ◽  
Hiroshi Takaba ◽  
Kin-Ya Matsumoto ◽  
Seiji Kameno ◽  
Noriyuki Kawaguchi

A molecular outflow is one of the most conspicuous active phenomena associated with protostars, and the kinetic energy of its outflowing mass is as large as that of random motions of ambient molecular cloud, which suggests that outflow has dynamically influence on ambient molecular gas. Possible observational evidence which suggests the existence of dynamical interaction between molecular outflow and ambient molecular cloud has been detected in several star forming regions (Fukui et al. 1986; Iwata et al. 1988). Recent detections of H2O maser emission associated with low-mass protostars (e.g. Comoretto et al. 1990) also suggest that there still exist active phenomena in the low-mass star forming regions.Molecular outflow ρ Oph-East, discovered toward a low-mass protostar IRAS 16293-2422 (Fukui et al. 1986), has been known as a site of dynamical interaction between molecular outflowing gas and ambient molecular cloud by CO and NH3 observation (Mizuno et al. 1990). Existence of several strong H2O maser spots (Wilking & Claussen 1987; Wotten 1989; Terebey et al. 1992) also suggests that active phenomena are occurring in this region. In this paper, we report our result of H2O maser observation for molecular outflow ρ Oph-East with milli-arcsecond resolution by VLBI.


1989 ◽  
Vol 120 ◽  
pp. 128-128
Author(s):  
N.J. Evans

The NGC 2071 molecular cloud has been studied with a broad array of techniques, including a large scale study of CS emission, high resolution scans in the far-infrared, N H3 studies with the VLA, and near-infrarred imaging. The far-infrared emission constrains the density distribution to fall off approximately as r−1. The NH3 data strongly supports the presence of a disk oriented perpendicular to the molecular outflow, while the CS emission indicates the presence of dense gas in the region. The results will be combined into a coherent picture of this region of current star formation and molecular outflow.


1987 ◽  
Vol 115 ◽  
pp. 417-434 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frank H. Shu ◽  
Susana Lizano ◽  
Fred C. Adams

The problem of gravitational collapse and star formation is entirely different when the ratio of the mass of a molecular cloud Mcl to its magnetic flux Φ is high than when it is low. Magnetically-diluted overall collapse of a large dense core and the formation of an OB association or a bound cluster are the likely outcomes in the former case; quasi-static contraction of many small cores and their ultimate collapse to form a T association, in the latter. In our picture, the birth of a T association in a dark cloud like Taurus proceeds by ambipolar diffusion on a time-scale of ∼ 107 years. As magnetic and turbulent support is gradually lost from a small condensing core, it approaches a state resembling a slowly rotating singular isothermal sphere which, when it passes the brink of instability, collapses from “inside-out,” building up a central protostar and nebular disk. The emergent spectral energy distributions of theoretical models in this stage of protostellar evolution resemble closely those of recently found sources with steep spectra in the infrared. The protostellar phase is ended by the reversal of the infall by an intense stellar wind, whose ultimate source of energy derived from the differential rotation of the star. We argue that the initial breakout is likely to occur along the rotational poles, leading to collimated jets and bipolar outflows. The stellar jet eventually widens to sweep out gas in nearly all 4π steradian, revealing at the center a T Tauri star and a remnant nebular disk. We give rough scaling relations which must apply if an analogous process is to succeed for producing high mass stars.


2010 ◽  
Vol 6 (S270) ◽  
pp. 133-140
Author(s):  
Matthew R. Bate

AbstractI review what has been learnt so far regarding the origin of stellar properties from numerical simulations of the formation of groups and clusters of stars. In agreement with observations, stellar properties are found to be relatively robust to variations of initial conditions in terms of molecular cloud structure and kinetics, as long as extreme initial conditions (e.g. strong central condensation, weak or no turbulence) and small-scale driving are avoided, but properties may differ between bound and unbound clouds. Radiative feedback appears crucial for setting stellar masses, even for low-mass stars, while magnetic fields can provide low star formation rates.


Nature ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 368 (6473) ◽  
pp. 719-721 ◽  
Author(s):  
Akira Mizuno ◽  
Toshikazu Onishi ◽  
Masahiko Hayashi ◽  
Nagoyashi Ohashi ◽  
Kazuyoshi Sunada ◽  
...  

1990 ◽  
Vol 140 ◽  
pp. 305-308
Author(s):  
Rolf Güsten ◽  
Dirk Fiebig

We present results of recent circular polarization experiments with the MPIfR 100-m telescope, revealing for the first time, the magnetic field strength towards interstellar H2O masers and the dense cores of local dark cloud complexes. Weak Zeeman splittings of a few 10 kHz only in the 22.235 GHz maser transition of the non-paramagnetic H2O molecule imply magnetic field strengths of ~ 50 mG in the dense (n ~ 1010 cm−3) masing layer. With the recently identified CCS radical it became possible to study the magnetic field associated with dense (~ 105 cm−3) dark cloud cores, the potential sites of future star formation. We report the detection of a −110μG field towards TMC-1C, a low-mass core associated with the Taurus Molecular Cloud. From complementary gas density and kinetic temperature probing measurements, we derive approximate equipartition between magnetic, gravitational and thermal energy for this clump.


1994 ◽  
Vol 161 ◽  
pp. 470-472
Author(s):  
M. Kun

Radio molecular observations in the millimeter wavelength region in the last decade have revealed a number of giant molecular cloud complexes at relatively high galactic latitudes. Examples for such cloud complexes are Cepheus Flare (Lebrun 1986), and Ursa Major and Camelopardalis clouds (Heithausen et al. 1993). Because of their high galactic latitudes, these cloud complexes probably belong to the nearest molecular clouds and among them we may find some nearby regions of low-mass star formation.


1991 ◽  
Vol 147 ◽  
pp. 391-393
Author(s):  
F. Bertoldi ◽  
C.F. McKee ◽  
R.I. Klein

The gravitational stability of molecular cloud clumps before and after the onset of massive star formation is discussed. We suggest that the most massive clumps are magnetically supercritical but gravitationally stabilized by the hydromagnetic turbulence caused by FUV photoionization-regulated low-mass star formation in their interiors. The ionizing radiation of an O star can trigger star formation in initially sub- and supercritical clumps.


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