4.6 Article

Very compact radio emission from high-mass protostars II. Dust disks and ionized accretion flows

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 437, Issue 3, Pages 947-956

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20052872

Keywords

accretion, accretion disks; stars : formation; instrumentation : high angular resolution; ISM : HII regions

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This paper reports 43 GHz imaging of the high-mass protostars W33A, AFGL 2591 and NGC 7538 IRS9 at similar to 0.04 and similar to 0.6 resolution. In each case, weak (similar to mJy-level), compact (circle divide similar to 100 AU) emission is detected, which has an elongated shape ( axis ratio similar to 3). However, for AFGL 2591 and NGC 7538 IRS9, the emission is single-peaked, while for the highest-luminosity source, W33A, a mini-cluster of three sources is detected. The derived sizes, flux densities, and broad-band radio spectra of the sources support recent models where the initial expansion of H II regions around very young O-type stars is prevented by stellar gravity. In these models, accretion flows onto high-mass stars originate in large-scale molecular envelopes and become ionized close to the star. These models reproduce our observations of ionized gas as well as the structure of the molecular envelopes of these sources on 10(3)-10(4) AU scales derived previously from single-dish sub-millimeter continuum and line mapping. For AFGL 2591, the 43 GHz flux density is also consistent with dust emission from a disk recently seen in near-infrared speckle images. However, the alignment of the 43 GHz emission with the large-scale molecular outflow argues against an origin in a disk for AFGL 2591 and NGC 7538 IRS9. In contrast, the outflow from W 33A does not appear to be collimated. Together with previously presented case studies of W 3 IRS5 and AFGL 2136, our results indicate that the formation of stars and stellar clusters with luminosities up to similar to 10(5) L-circle dot proceeds through accretion and produces collimated outflows as in the solar-type case, with the additional feature that the accretion flow becomes ionized close to the star. Above similar to 10(5) L-circle dot, clusters of H II regions appear, and outflows are no longer collimated, possibly as the result of mergers of protostars or pre-stellar cores.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available