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Panoramic Views of Water Fountain Sources Hiroshi Imai Graduate School of Science and Engineering Kagoshima University A Neapolitan of Masers: Variability, Magnetism and VLBI 20 May 2013, CSIRO CASS, Australia
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Water fountain highly collimated, fast, stellar, molecular jet from AGB to post-AGB star, from spherical symmetric to asymmetric circumstellar envelope Egg Nebula (post-AGB star) ⓒ NASA Betelgeuse (Mira variable) ⓒ NASA W43A (OH/IR star) water fountain Deguchi et al. 2007 H 2 O maser spectrum (Likkel et al. 1992)
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Masers in water fountains Dynamical centers within 70 AU Systemic velocities within 3 km/s H 2 O and OH masers (Imai et al. 2002) SiO and H 2 O masers (Imai et al. 2005) SPITZER/GLIMPSE image around W43A (Deguchi et al. 2007) VLT 11.85 micron image of W43A (Lagadec et al. 2011)
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Mechanism of stellar jet launch See Vlemmings’s talk about magnetic field Mechanism of planetary nebula shaping by jet Character of stellar system: single star v.s. binary Dynamical time scales: t dyn (H2O)=l/v exp <100 yr, But equal to true ages? Can we see evolution/devolution? Precessing jets? Recurrent jet ignitions? Main-sequence mass and evolutionary phase of host star? What is low-velocity H 2 O maser components? Open issues of water fountains
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1.Luminosities and secular motions of the water fountain systems Astrometry with VLBA and VERA 2.Thermal molecular emission ( 12 CO, 13 CO) High velocity molecular component Hot-bottom burning in nucleosynthesis 3.Kinematics of low velocity H 2 O maser components Relic AGB envelope or newly developed equatorial flow? Three new aspects in this talk
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SiO masers: W43A with VLA, σ~3 mas (Imai et al. 2005) H 2 O masers: W43A; IRAS 19134+2131; IRAS 18286-0959; IRAS 18460-0151 with VLBA and VERA, σ~0.2 mas (Imai et al. 2005, 2007, 2013, submitted) 1612 MHz OH masers: W43A; IRAS 18286-0959; IRAS 18460-0151 with VLBA and EVN, σ~2 mas (Imai et al. 2005, 2007, 2013, submitted) Astrometry of water fountains Measurement of absolute coordinates and H 2 O maser trigonometry
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Trigonometric parallax distances Planning water fountain astrometry with VLBA, VERA (after upgrade or KVN+VERA), and LBA including W43A
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Large deviation from Galactic rotation Low galactic latitude: suggesting intermediate-mass, old population IRAS source18286-095918460-015119134+2131 D [kpc]3.6±0.62.1±0.68.0 +0.9 -0.7 R [kpc]4.8±0.56.3±0.57.4 +0.4 -0.3 z [pc]7±17±2650 +70 -60 V R [km/s]51±17100±143 +53 -46 V θ [km/s]169±22286±16125 +20 -28 V z [km/s]-2±20-9±118 +48 -39 ReferenceImai+2013 (in press) Imai+2013 (submitted) Imai+2007
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sourceD [kpc]F 12 [Jy](BC) 12 L bol [L sun ] IRAS 15103-57542.310.864.246800 IRAS 16342-38142.016.2107.213000 IRAS 18286-09593.624.874.8312900 W 43A2.623.7315.483900 IRAS 18460-01512.1—6.720.902.885490—5000 IRAS 18596+03151.6?2.59923.28290? IRAS 19134+21318.05.0588.3135000 IRAS 19190+11028.61.5904.8311000 Bolometric luminosities of water fountain sources van der Veen & Breukers 1989 Nakashima et al. 2000 Really intermediate mass AGB/post-AGB stars?
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H2OH2O OH CO J=3→2 emission from IRAS 16342-3814 (Imai et al. 2012) Thermal molecular emission from water fountains Atacama Submillimeter Telescope Experiment (ASTE) 10 m telescope See also 12 CO and 13 CO J=2-1 detections by He et al. (2008) and Rizzo et al. (2011).
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SHAPE modelling Spherical envelope (+ expanding torus) + collimated jet Gas density ρ(r) Gas clump distribution and relative opacity obtained by Monte-Carlo method simulation Ste ff en et al. 2011 HST image (Sahai et al. 2005) SHAPE model Model geometry V torus =15 km/s V jet =550 kms
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Extremely low 12 C/ 13 C isotopic ratio 12 CO 13 CO SHAPE simulation Estimation of possible absolute opacity with RADEX/LAMDA (van der Tak et al. 2007; Schöier et al. 2005) optically thick 12 CO, but high intensity ratio cannot be explained 12 CO/ 13 CO intensity ratio ~1.5 12 C/ 13 C isotopic ratio~1.3 Hot-bottom burning of nucleosynthesis as found in intermediate-mass AGB/post AGB star
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Relic AGB envelope or new equatorial flow? W43A (1994—2005) Low velocity components (V LSR =9—70 km/s), V sys (W43A)~35 km/s
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IRAS 18286-0959 Maser motions in 2006—2007 (Imai et al. 2013) Short-lived, low-velocity features V exp < 30 km/s 1612 MHz OH maser Double helix jet model (Yung et al. 2011) Systemic motion
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V exp (OH)~V exp (H 2 O low)~20 km/s Dynamical centers within 20 AU ΔV sys =10-40 km/s Developed relic AGB envelope IRAS 18460-0151 (Imai et al. 2013 submitted)
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Ignition of equatorial flow? V sys ~40 km/s IRAS 16342-3814 (Claussen et al. 2009) V exp (H 2 O)~ 180 km/s V exp (OH)~70 km/s See also e.g. OH 009.8-0.4 (Walsh et al. 2009)
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Coevolution of jet and equatorial torus/flow with a time lag High velocity H2O masers in WFs Ignition of jet Maser region comparable to MIR/optical lobes Low velocity H2O masers in WFs Shorter t torus indicating association with relic AGB envelope Transition from relic envelope to equatorial torus/flow?
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Maser region is really evolving. Recurrent maser excitation Some point symmetry But different feature group spacing between blue- and red-shifted lobes T dyn (maser) < T dyn (jet) or T dyn (envelope) Decadal evolution of the W43A H 2 O masers along the jet (Chong et al. in prep.)
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Large deviation of WF sources in the Galactic midplane from Galactic rotation Possible low 12 C/ 13 C intensity ratio suggesting the hot-bottom burning nucleosynthesis in an intermediate-mass AGB star Variety of spatio-kinematics of low-velocity H2O maser components: transition from relic AGB envelope to equatorial flow or independent phenomena? Visible decadal evolution/devolution of WF H2O masers L* derived from maser trigonometry in forthcoming VLBI True t dyn of WF jet and envelope/torus measured with ALMA New WF candidates discovered by unbiased maser surveys (H2O: HOPS, OH: SPLASH & GASKAP) Summary and future perspectives
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