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Osservatorio Astrofisico di Arcetri
Hot Molecular Cores Riccardo Cesaroni Osservatorio Astrofisico di Arcetri The environment of HMCs: the clump The properties of HMCs: “light’’ & “heavy’’ High-mass star formation: a tentative scenario G : a benchmark for massive SF ≡≫≪ 10M⊙ ′″∼ (* massiccia M*>10M⊙ L*>104L⊙ B3-O)
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HMCs: a (convenient) definition
Observational definition of HMC: region traced by high-excitation lines of exotic (i.e. low-abundance) molecules (CH3CN, HCOOCH3, etc…) HMCs associated with signposts of massive star formation (UC HIIs, masers, luminous IR sources) Are HMCs distinct physical entities?
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HMCs: a (convenient) definition
Observational definition of HMC: region traced by high-excitation lines of exotic (i.e. low-abundance) molecules (CH3CN, HCOOCH3, etc…) HMCs associated with signposts of massive star formation (UC HIIs, masers, luminous IR sources) Are HMCs distinct physical entities?
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The environment of HMCs: the clump
HMCs surrounded by molecular “clumps’’: Rclump = 10 RHMC ; Mclump= 10 MHMC ; nclump = 0.01 nHMC D (pc) M (MO) nH2 (cm-3) T (K) Clump 1 1000 105 30 HMC 0.1 100 107
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Clump UC HII HMC Core
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Clump UC HII HMC
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Clump HMC
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nR-p with p=1.5-2.5 no break at HMC
singular isothermal sphere? Mclump > Mvirial clumps unstable Vclump = VHMC HMCs at rest wrt clumps TR-q with q= clumps centrally heated Clumps might be undergoing inside-out collapse HMCs are density peaks in clumps HMCs are T peaks “enlightened’’ by embedded stars
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HMC Clump nH2 R-2.6 Fontani et al. (2002)
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nR-p with p=1.5-2.5 no break at HMC
singular isothermal sphere? Mclump > Mvirial clumps unstable Vclump = VHMC HMCs at rest wrt clumps TR-q with q= clumps centrally heated Clumps might be undergoing inside-out collapse HMCs are density peaks in clumps HMCs are T peaks “enlightened’’ by embedded stars
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Fontani et al. (2002) sample of 12 Clumps
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nH2R-p with p=1.5-2.5 no break at HMC
singular isothermal sphere? Mclump > Mvirial clumps unstable Vclump = VHMC HMCs at rest wrt clumps TR-q with q= clumps centrally heated Clumps might be undergoing inside-out collapse HMCs are density peaks in clumps HMCs are T peaks “enlightened’’ by embedded stars HMCs are deeply related to clumps
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nH2R-p with p=1.5-2.5 no break at HMC
singular isothermal sphere? Mclump > Mvirial clumps unstable Vclump = VHMC HMCs at rest wrt clumps TR-q with q= clumps centrally heated Clumps might be undergoing inside-out collapse HMCs are density peaks in clumps HMCs are T peaks “enlightened’’ by embedded stars HMCs are deeply related to clumps
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The stellar content of HMCs
THMC 100 K > Tclump = 30 K HMCs heated by embedded luminous stars (sub)mm continuum mass of gas in HMC far-IR continuum luminosity of stars in HMC Luminosity vs Mass of HMCs: “light” HMCs (<10-20 MO): few stars, M* > MHMC “heavy” HMCs (>100 MO ): cluster, Mclust MHMC
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Kurtz et al. (2000)
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M* > MHMC Mcluster MHMC
Scalo’98 IMF
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The stellar content of HMCs
THMC 100 K > Tclump = 30 K HMCs heated by embedded luminous stars (sub)mm continuum mass of gas in HMC far-IR continuum luminosity of stars in HMC Luminosity vs Mass of HMCs: “light” HMCs (<10-20 MO): few stars, M* > MHMC “heavy” HMCs (>100 MO ): cluster, Mclust MHMC
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Examples: “Light’’ HMC with single star
IRAS : Keplerian disk equilibrium MHMC = 5 MO; M* = 7 +/- 3 MO “Heavy’’ HMC with multiple stars G : 4 UCHIIs 4 B1-O9.5 stars G : rotation about 2 embedded YSOs ; MHMC > Mdynamic non-equilibrium fragmentation over Rcentrifugal ∼ YSOs ∼ RHMC/5
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M* > MHMC M*=7 MO Keplerian rotation IRAS 20126+4104
Cesaroni et al. (2005) Moscadelli et al. (2005) M*=7 MO Keplerian rotation M* > MHMC
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Examples: “Light’’ HMC with single star
IRAS : Keplerian disk equilibrium MHMC = 5 MO; M* = 7 +/- 3 MO “Heavy’’ HMC with multiple stars G : 4 UCHIIs 4 B1-O9.5 stars G : rotation about 2 embedded YSOs ; MHMC > Mdynamic non-equilibrium fragmentation over Rcentrifugal ∼ YSOs ∼ RHMC/5
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Cesaroni et al. (1998); Hofner (pers. comm.)
UC HII HMC B0.5 B0 B1
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Beltran et al. (2005); Hofner et al. (in prep.)
HC HII or wind HMC CH3CN(12-11)
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Beltran et al. (2005); Hofner et al. (in prep.)
NH3 red-shifted NH3 blue-shifted NH3 bulk CH3CN(12-11)
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Examples: “Light’’ HMC with single star
IRAS : Keplerian disk equilibrium MHMC = 5 MO; M* = 7 +/- 3 MO “Heavy’’ HMC with multiple stars G : 4 UCHIIs 4 B1-O9.5 stars G : rotation about 2 embedded YSOs ; MHMC > Mdynamic non-equilibrium fragmentation over Rcentrifugal ∼ YSOs ∼ RHMC/5
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A possible scenario for high-mass SF
Unstable clump: tff=105 yr Clump nR-2 Mclump > Mvirial
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A possible scenario for high-mass SF
Unstable clump: tff=105 yr Inside-out collapse: dMaccr/dt=Mclump/tff=10-2 MO/yr infalling Clump nR-2 nR-3/2
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A possible scenario for high-mass SF
Unstable clump: tff=105 yr Inside-out collapse: dMaccr/dt=Mclump/tff=10-2 MO/yr Rotation of core with rotation period=105 yr infalling Clump nR-2 nR-3/2 rotating Core
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A possible scenario for high-mass SF
Unstable clump: tff=105 yr Inside-out collapse: dMaccr/dt=Mclump/tff=10-2 MO/yr Rotation of core with rotation period=105 yr Fragmentation over Rcentrifugal=RHMC/5=0.01 pc infalling Clump nR-2 nR-3/2 rotating Core rotating disks
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A possible scenario for high-mass SF
Unstable clump: tff=105 yr Inside-out collapse: dMaccr/dt=Mclump/tff=10-2 MO/yr Rotation of core with rotation period=105 yr Fragmentation over Rcentrifugal=RHMC/5=0.01 pc Formation of HMC with ∼ 100 stars (dMaccr/dt)star= 10-2 MO /yr /100 = = 10-4 MO/yr over tSF=tff=105 yr infalling Clump nR-3/2 nR-2 rotating HMC circumstellar disks
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Speculation versus Observations: the G24.78+0.08 star forming region
Group of UCHIIs and masers of various types, surrounded by molecular clump: RClump= 0.6 pc ; MClump= 5000 MO ; TClump= 30 K Clump with nR-1.8 and MClump> Mvirial
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Cesaroni et al. (2003)
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T=30 K T=120 K Codella et al. (1997) Furuya et al. (2002)
Cesaroni et al. (2003) T=30 K T=120 K
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O MO Codella et al. (1997) Furuya et al. (2002)
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Two massive cores: one “warm’’ core (30 K) one hot core The hot core splits into 2 HMCs with T=120 K, M=100 MO: 1 HMC with embedded UC HII region (O9.5 star) 1 HMC with mid-IR source (GLIMPSE)
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Beltran et al. (2004,2005) Furuya et al. (2002)
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Two massive cores: one “warm’’ core (30 K) one hot core The hot core splits into 2 HMCs with T=120 K, M=100 MO: 1 HMC with embedded UC HII region (O9.5 star) 1 HMC with mid-IR source (GLIMPSE)
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Two bipolar outflows: one from “warm’’ core one from HMCs Both outflows are massive: Mout= 10 MO tout= yr dMout/dt = MO/yr
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Moscadelli et al. (in prep.)
Beltran et al. (2004,2005) Furuya et al. (2002) Forster & Caswell (1989) Moscadelli et al. (in prep.) Mdyn= 19 MO Mdyn= 55 MO
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HMCs rotate about outflow axis:
Mdyn 10 MO < MHMC 100 MO CH3OH masers may trace rotation about MO and 55 MO (= 20MOstar + 30MOgas): spots distribution = Rcentrifugal(HMC) = RHMC/3 circumstellar disks spots velocities = 3 Vrot(HMC) angular momentum conservation
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Conclusions for G24.78+0.08: Unstable clump? YES tclump= tff =105yr
High-mass star formation? YES (UCHIIs, masers) Rotating HMCs? YES tHMC = toutf = 5 104yr Centrifugally supported disks? YES M* =20MO The proposed scenario seems to work! BUT… 5. NO infall detected!?! Why that??? Infall confined in small region, close to HMC Outflows “spoil’’ infall signatures Infall halted by centrifugal forces In fact, see Keto et al., Sollins et al., Zhang et al., etc.
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Conclusion High-mass star formation could proceed through inside-out collapse of pc-scale clumps and subsequent (centrifugal) fragmentation of rotating, massive cores
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