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The ALMA observations of the high-mass star-forming region G10.34-0.14 reveal the existence of three massive hot cores. The most massive of these cores, core S1, exhibits both high and low-velocity jet/outflow in the CO, SiO, and CH3OH. It is associated with water and Class I methanol masers. The core N shows a low-velocity CO outflow and is associated with an Extended Green Object, along with Class I and II methanol masers. The characteristics of the outflows and masers in these two cores suggest they are in different stage of evolution and varying physical conditions.
We imaged the excited OH maser line at 6.035 GHz associated with the 6.7 GHz methanol masers in a selected sample of high-mass young stellar objects using the European VLBI Network. The excited OH emission was found in a survey of methanol maser sources carried out since 2018 with the Torun 32-m telescope. The overlap of radial velocities of spectral features of methanol and excited OH suggested that both lines arose in the same volume of gas, therefore, we verified this hypothesis with the interferometric data. Here, we present the first images at the milliarcsecond scale of both maser transitions and identify the Zeeman pairs at the ex-OH line estimating the strength of the magnetic field in G43.149+00.013 (W49N).
We present the prospects from astrometric spectral line VLBI in the era of ngEHT. We review the potential targets, that span many interesting science cases. We summarise the approaches that have been demonstrated to work at lower frequencies and touch on the simulations that give us great confidence that these same approaches will continue to work at sub-mm wavelengths. We conclude that this is a worthwhile pursuit with a high probability of success.
We present initial results from our JWST NIRSpec program to study the α-abundances in the M31 disk. The Milky Way has two chemically-defined disks, the low-α and high-α disks, which are closely related to the thin and thick disks, respectively. The origin of the two populations and the α-bimodality between them is not entirely clear, although there are now several models that can reproduce the observed features. To help constrain the models and discern the origin, we have undertaken a study of the chemical abundances of the M31 disk using JWST NIRSpec, in order to determine whether stars in M31’s disk also show an α-abundance bimodality. Approximately 100 stars were observed in our single NIRSpec field at a projected distance of 18 kpc from the M31 center. The 1-D extracted spectra have an average signal-to-noise ratio of 85 leading to statistical metallicity precision of 0.016 dex, α-abundance precision of 0.012 dex, and a radial velocity precision 8 km s-1 (mostly from systematics). The initial results indicate that, in contrast to the Milky Way, there is no α-bimodality in the M31 disk, and no low-α sequence. The entire stellar population falls along a single chemical sequence very similar to the MW’s high-α component which had a high star formation rate. While this is somewhat unexpected, the result is not that surprising based on other studies that found the M31 disk has a larger velocity dispersion than the MW and is dominated by a thick component. M31 has had a more active accretion and merger history than the MW which might explain the chemical differences.
The Maser Monitoring Organisation is a collection of researchers exploring the use of time-variable maser emission in the investigation of astrophysical phenomena. The forward directed aspects of research primarily involve using maser emission as a tool to investigate star formation. Simultaneously, these activities have deepened knowledge of maser emission itself in addition to uncovering previously unknown maser transitions. Thus a feedback loop is created where both the knowledge of astrophysical phenomena and the utilised tools of investigation themselves are iteratively sharpened. The project goals are open-ended and constantly evolving, however, the reliance on radio observatory maser monitoring campaigns persists as the fundamental enabler of research activities within the group.
The gravitational lensing signal produced by a galaxy or a galaxy cluster is determined by its total matter distribution, providing us with a way to directly constrain their dark matter content. State-of-the-art numerical simulations successfully reproduce many observed properties of galaxies and can be used as a source of mock observations and predictions. Many gravitational lensing studies aim at constraining the nature of dark matter, discriminating between cold dark matter and alternative models. However, many past results are based on the comparison to simulations that did not include baryonic physics. Here we show that the presence of baryons can significantly alter the predictions: we look at the structural properties (profiles and shapes) of elliptical galaxies and at the inner density slope of subhaloes. Our results demonstrate that future simulations must model the interplay between baryons and alternative dark matter, to generate realistic predictions that could significantly modify the current constraints.
We aim to reveal properties of evolution stages in AGB phase; Mira, OH/IR stars, and non-variable OH/IR stars. We presented results of our VLBI observations of four stars; NSV17351, OH39.7+1.5, IRC–30363, and AW Tau. We used the VERA VLBI array to observe 22 GHz H2O masers. Parallaxes of the four sources were obtained to be 0.247±0.035 mas (4.05±0.59 kpc), 0.54±0.03 mas (1.85±0.10 kpc), 0.562±0.201 mas (1.78±0.73 kpc), and 0.449±0.032 mas (2.23±0.16 kpc). Determination of pulsation period of NSV17351 was done for the first time. We revealed the position and kinematics of NSV17351 in our Galaxy and found that NSV17351 is located in an interarm region. A new period-magnitude relationship was indicated in the infrared region. Various other properties based on the distance measurements are also discussed. We have to emphasize that the VLBI astrometry is effective and the only way for parallax measurements of dust obscured OH/IR stars.
Intense mass loss through cool, low-velocity winds is a defining characteristic of low-to-intermediate mass stars during the asymptotic giant branch (AGB) evolutionary stage. Such winds return up ∼80% of the initial stellar mass to the interstellar medium and play a major role in enriching it with dust and heavy elements. A challenge to understanding the physics underlying AGB mass loss is its dependence on an interplay between complex and highly dynamic processes, including pulsations, convective flows, shocks, magnetic fields, and opacity changes resulting from dust and molecule formation. I highlight some examples of recent advances in our understanding of late-stage stellar mass loss that are emerging from radio and (sub)millimeter observations, with a particular focus on those that resolve the surfaces and extended atmospheres of evolved stars in space, time, and frequency.
In this current study, we report only the preliminary result of the SiO v=0 Ј=5→4 emission toward W49 N at 230 GHz, observed using the ALMA telescope on September 29, 2018. The position–velocity diagram of the SiO emission shows a structure of a bipolar outflow and has a face-on orientation with an inclination angle of 36.4±0.4 degrees with respect to the line of sight. Here we summarize the calculated physical properties of its outflow.
Binary/multiple stellar systems are as abundant as single stars. They are very interesting cosmic laboratories as they are related to many astrophysical phenomena. In the case of AGB (and post-AGB) stars, binaries are the most likely explanation for the shaping of non spherical PNe, a long standing problem in stellar evolution. While many binaries are known in the PNe phase, there are few examples in the previous AGB phase. Hydrodynamical models of the binary interaction are available, but well known parameters for orbits are non-existent. We observed the AGB binary system R Aqr at 7 mm using the Global VLBI array in wide-band continuum and SiO masers. The strong SiO masers were used to self-calibrate the observations and pinpoint the location of the AGB component. We used the continuum to try to directly detect the WD companion or its close environments (non-thermal emission from accretion disks/jets). We present our preliminary results for R Aqr on the relative positions of the J=1−0 SiO masers (v=1) with respect to the white dwarf position. This opens a new way to determine orbits in binaries at the AGB phase and better study their role in late stellar evolution and PNe shaping.
Exoplanet detection surveys revealed the existence of numerous multi-planetary systems packed close to their stability limit. In this proceeding, we review the mechanism driving the instability of compact systems, originally published in (Petit et al. 2020). Compact systems dynamics are dominated by the interactions between resonances involving triplets of planets. The complex network of three-planet mean motion resonances drives a slow chaotic semi-major axes diffusion, leading to a fast and destructive scattering phase. This model reproduces quantitatively the instability timescale found numerically. We can observe signpost of this process on exoplanet systems architecture. The critical spacing ensuring stability scales as the planet-to star mass ratio to the power 1/4. It explains why the Hill radius is not an adapted measure of dynamical compactness of exoplanet systems, particularly for terrestrial planets. We also provide some insight on the theoretical tools developped in the original work and how they can be of interest in other problems.
While the rotation curve of the inner Galactic disk is well determined, study of the outer rotation curve requires observational measurements of distances and proper motions of individual sources in the Outer Galaxy. We report astrometric observation for water maser sources in the Outer Galactic disk conducted with VERA, aiming to measure the Outer Rotation Curve. We have measured annual parallaxes and proper motions for these objects. Our result was consistent with recent other works based on astrometry and classical Cepheid observations. Epicyclic frequency seems to suggest that 2 and 4 spiral mode are dominant in the inner and outer Galaxy, respectively.
Since 2017, and the formation of the maser monitoring organisation (M2O), we have observed several intriguing events. These events have included possible accretion bursts, strong jets, periodicity after a flare, a heat-wave of radiation travelling outward at a fraction of the speed of light, to name a few. In September 2019 the M2O was notified of another source showing flaring behavior, and here we present the possibility of the first discovery of long-term maser periodicity from the high-mass star formation region (HMSFR) G024.33+0.14, with a period of about 3000 days.
Extragalactic maser sources are unique tools to derive fundamental physical quantities of the host galaxies, e.g, geometry of accretion disks around super-massive black holes and precise black hole masses, and study in detail the interaction region of nuclear jets/outflows with the interstellar medium, in nearby and distant Active Galactic Nuclei. So far, however, extragalactic maser searches have yielded detection of few percent, and only relatively few maser sources have been found. Because of their unprecedented sensitivity, new upcoming facilities, like the SKA and the ngVLA, will allow to significantly increase the number of known (water) maser sources. This will lead to the chance of performing statistically-relevant studies of the maser phenomenon (and its occurrence), derive extragalactic masers luminosity functions, and ultimately (in particular, through the aid of longer-baselines arrays options) to perform the studies described above for larger samples and up to cosmological distances.
The Central Molecular Zone (CMZ) in the Galactic Center region shows outstanding non-circular motion unlike the Galactic disk. While several models describing this non-circular motion have been proposed, a uniform kinematic model of the CMZ orbit has not yet emerged. To uncover the dynamics of the Galactic center region, we conducted VLBI astrometric observations of 22GHz water maser sources towards the Galactic center using VERA. By measuring parallaxes and proper motions, we can determine whether each source is actually located in the CMZ or not, and identify the three-dimensional positions and velocities in the non-circular orbit if the source is indeed located in the CMZ. We present the results of our astrometric study for several maser sources associated with molecular clouds towards the Galactic center. The astrometric observations toward Sgr B2(M) indicated that Sgr B2 complex is moving toward the positive Galactic longitude relative to Sgr A*.
This paper reviews our current knowledge about pulsating chemically peculiar (CP) stars. CP stars are slowly rotating upper main-sequence objects, efficiently employing diffusion in their atmospheres. They can be divided into magnetic and non-magnetic objects. Magnetic activity significantly influence their pulsational characteristics. Only a handful of magnetic, classical pulsating objects are now known. The only exceptions are about 70 rapidly oscillating Ap stars, which seem to be located within a very tight astrophysical parameter space. Still, many observational and theoretical efforts are needed to understand all important physical aspects and their interrelationships. The most important steps to reach these goals are reviewed.
Thanks to forthcoming large-scale surveys, a tremendous number of strong lenses will be discovered in the coming years. The gain in accuracy on H0 from such a large population of lensed quasars is a key question for the future of time-delay cosmography. In such context, lensed systems will have to be modeled in an automated way, with models that are sufficiently generic to apply to every lens. I explore the biases that may arise from unaccounted-for azimuthal structures in mass models. The non-modeled twists in lensing galaxies are expected to bias the shear inference but not H0. Disregarded ellipticity gradients, boxyness and discyness may impact the cosmological inference on a lens-by-lens basis. Nevertheless, the diversity of azimuthal mass profile in lenses balances the bias at a population level and the H0 inference can thus benefits from such large surveys.