Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-j824f Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-08T05:38:27.771Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

SPECTROSCOPY OF THE ORION MOLECULAR CLOUD CORE

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 August 2015

N. Z. Scoville*
Affiliation:
Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA 01003

Extract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

Recent infrared and radio spectroscopic data pertaining to the Orion BN-KL infrared cluster are reviewed. A new, high resolution CO map shows that the thermal structure over the central 10′(1.5 pc) in the Orion molecular cloud is dominated by energy sources in the infrared cluster and M42. Peak CO brightness temperatures of 90 K occur on KL and near the bar at the southern edge of M42.

Within the central 45″ of the infrared cluster, both radio and IR data reveal a highly energetic environment. Millimeter lines of several molecules (e.g. CO, HCN, and SiO) show emission over a full velocity range of 100 km s−1. These supersonic flows can be modeled as a differentially expanding envelope containing a total of ~5 M of gas within an outer radius of r ≃ 1.3 × 1017 cm. Over the same area emission is seen from vibrationally excited molecular hydrogen at an excitation temperature of 2000 K. The high velocity mm-line emission and the NIR H2 lines are clearly related since they exhibit similar spatial extents and line widths. Comparison of the total cooling rate for all the H2 lines with the estimated kinetic energy and expansion time for the mm-emission region indicates that the H2 emission probably arises from shock fronts where the expanding envelope impinges on the outer cloud.

Near IR spectroscopy also probes ionized and neutral gas closely associated with BN. Br α and Br γ emission is detected from an ultracompact HII region of mass MHII ≲ 10−4 M. Full widths for the HII lines are ~400 km s−1. CO bandhead emission detected in BN at λ ≃ 2.3 μm is probably collisionally pumped in a high excitation zone (nH+H2 > 1010 cm−3 and TK ≃ 3000 K) at only a few AU from the star. The velocity of both the HII and CO emission is VLSR ≃ + 20 km s−1; thus BN appears to be redshifted by 11 km s−1 with respect to OMC-1.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Reidel 1981 

References

Aitken, D.K., Roche, P.R., Spenser, P.M., and Jones, B. 1980, M.N.R.A.S. (in press).Google Scholar
Baud, B., Bieging, J.H., Plambeck, R., Thornton, D., Welch, J., and Wright, M. 1980, IAU Symposium No. 87 (Interstellar Molecules), ed. Andrew, B.: Reidel, Dordrecht, p. 545 Google Scholar
Beck, S.C., Lacy, J.H., and Geballe, T.R. 1979, Ap. J. (Letters), 234, L213.Google Scholar
Becklin, E.E., Neugebauer, G., and Wynn-Williams, C.G. 1973, Ap. J. (Letters), 182, L7.Google Scholar
Beckwith, S., Persson, S.E., Neugebauer, G., and Becklin, E.E. 1978, Ap. J., 223, 464.Google Scholar
Beckwith, S., Persson, S.E., Neugebauer, G. 1979, Ap. J., 227, 436.Google Scholar
Dalgarno, A.A. and Roberge, W.G. 1979, Ap. J., 233, L25.Google Scholar
Gautier, T.N., Fink, U., Treffers, R.R., and Larson, H.P. 1976, Ap. J. (Letters), 207, L129.Google Scholar
Genzel, R., Moran, J.M., Lane, A.P., Predmore, C.R., Ho, P.T.P., Hansen, S.S., and Reid, M.J. 1979, Ap. J. (Letters), 231, L73.Google Scholar
Genzel, R., Reid, M.J., Moran, J.M., and Downes, D. 1980, Ap. J. (submitted).Google Scholar
Goldreich, P. and Kwan, J. 1974, Ap. J., 189, 441.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grasdalen, G.L. 1976, Ap. J. (Letters), 205, L83.Google Scholar
Hall, D.N., Kleinmann, S.G., Ridgway, S.T., Gillett, F.C. 1978, Ap. J. (Letters), 223, L47.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hollenbach, D.J. and Shull, J.M. 1977, Ap. J., 216, 419.Google Scholar
Joyce, R.R., Simon, M., and Simon, T. 1978, Ap. J., 220, 156.Google Scholar
Kutner, M.L., Tucker, K.D., Chin, G., and Thaddeus, P. 1977, Ap. J., 215, 521.Google Scholar
Kwan, J. 1977, Ap. J., 216, 713.Google Scholar
Kwan, J. and Scoville, N.Z. 1976, Ap. J. (Letters), 210, L39.Google Scholar
Nadeau, D. and Geballe, T.R. 1979, Ap. J. (Letters), 230, L169.Google Scholar
Phillips, J.P. and Beckman, J.E. 1980, M.N.R.A.S. (in press).Google Scholar
Phillips, T.G., Huggins, P.J., Neugebauer, G., and Werner, M.W. 1977, Ap. J. (Letters), 217, L161.Google Scholar
Scoville, N.Z., Hall, D.N.B., Kleinmann, S.G., and Ridgway, S.T. 1979, Ap. J. (Letters), 232, L121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scoville, N.Z., Kleinmann, S.G., Hall, D.N.B., and Ridgway, S.T. 1980a (in preparation).Google Scholar
Scoville, N.Z., Schloerb, F.P., and Goldsmith, P.F. 1980b (in preparation).Google Scholar
Simon, M., Righini-Cohen, G., Joyce, R.R., and Simon, T. 1979, Ap. J. (Letters), 230, L175.Google Scholar
Solomon, P.M., Huguenin, G.R., and Scoville, N.Z. 1980, Ap. J. (Letters), in press.Google Scholar
Thompson, R.I. and Boroson, T.A. 1977, Ap. J. (Letters), 216, L75.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Watson, D.M., Storey, J.W.V., Townes, C.H., Haller, E.E., and Hansen, W.L. 1980, Ap. J. (in press).Google Scholar
Werner, M.W., Gatley, I., Harper, D.A., Becklin, E.E., Lowenstein, R.F., Telesco, C.M., and Thronson, H.A. 1976, Ap. J., 204, 420.Google Scholar
Zuckerman, B., Kuiper, T.B.H., and Kuiper, E.N.R. 1976, Ap. J. (Letters), 209, L137.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zuckerman, B., Palmer, P., and Morris, M. 1980, B.A.A.S., 12, 483.Google Scholar