1 / 39

Extragalactic Star Formation activity

Extragalactic Star Formation activity. Eagle Nebulae. NGC 253. Antennae. Estelle Bayet. Collaborators : S. Viti (UCL-UK), D.A.Williams (UCL-UK), J. Martin-Pintado (CSIC-Spain), S. Martin (ESO-Chile), R. Aladro (IRAM-Spain), Z. Awad (UCL-UK),…. I II III IV. Outline :

Download Presentation

Extragalactic Star Formation activity

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Extragalactic Star Formation activity Eagle Nebulae NGC 253 Antennae Estelle Bayet Collaborators : S. Viti (UCL-UK), D.A.Williams (UCL-UK), J. Martin-Pintado (CSIC-Spain), S. Martin (ESO-Chile), R. Aladro (IRAM-Spain), Z. Awad (UCL-UK),…

  2. I II III IV Outline : I. Motivation and context II. Results: II.a. Molecular extended gas (PDR) II.b. Molecular very dense gas III. Molecules useful for inferring SF activity? IV. Conclusions and Perspectives

  3. I II III IV Extragalactic Star Formation activity NGC 253 AGN or SB Molecular gas Star-forming regions Dust grains Ionised gas Winds, outflows or inflows Stars Dark Matter halo Etc… A MESS !!!

  4. I II III IV Assumed Star-forming regions Ionized gas AGN or SB Atomic gas Density increase Molecular gas Star-forming regions Molecular extended gas (PDR) Dust grains Ionised gas Molecular very dense gas Winds, outflows or inflows Stars Dark Matter halo Stars in formation Etc…

  5. I II III IV Assumed Star-forming regions AGN or SB Molecular gas Star-forming regions Dust grains Ionised gas Winds, outflows or inflows Stars Dark Matter halo Etc… ``Isolated” or in filamentary structure

  6. I II III IV Assumed Star-forming regions AGN or SB Molecular gas Star-forming regions Dust grains Ionised gas Winds, outflows or inflows Stars Dark Matter halo Etc… Stars already formed, UV & FUV sources

  7. I II III IV Assumed Star-forming regions AGN or SB Molecular gas Star-forming regions Dust grains Ionised gas Winds, outflows or inflows Stars Dark Matter halo Etc… Starburst (SB)  NUCLEUS

  8. I II III IV Assumed Star-forming regions AGN or SB Molecular gas Star-forming regions Dust grains Ionised gas Winds, outflows or inflows Stars Dark Matter halo Etc… Active Galactic Nucleus (AGN)  NUCLEUS

  9. I II III IV Assumed Star-forming regions AGN or SB Molecular gas Star-forming regions Dust grains Ionised gas Winds, outflows or inflows Stars Dark Matter halo Etc… SB + AGN  NUCLEUS

  10. I II III IV Interest of Extragalactic studies ? • Various chemical and physical conditions investigated !!! •  SFR from 10 to 100 M0/yrs

  11. I II III APM 08279 z ~ 4 Henize 2-10 NGC 253 Antennae IC 10 IC 342 M 83 NGC 6946

  12. I II III IV Interest of Extragalactic studies ? • Various chemical and physical conditions investigated !!! •  SFR from 10 to 100 M0/yrs • Main issue: spatial resolution !!!

  13. I II III IV I. Context and Key questions IRAM Plateau de Bure Interferometer (IRAM-PdB) Caltech Submillimeter Observatory (CSO) ~ 5” = 16 pc ~ 22” = 71 pc IC 10: Composite image in RGB (NOAO)

  14. I II III IV Interest of Extragalactic studies ? • Various chemical and physical conditions investigated !!! •  SFR from 10 to 100 M0/yrs • Main issue: spatial resolution !!! Limitation: Gas dense and less dense mixed + Dust and gas mixed  AVERAGE properties derived but CHEMISTRY CAN HELP !! ALMA

  15. III III IV II. Results Spatial scales !!! Stars already formed, UV & FUV sources Ionized gas Atomic gas Density increase Molecular extended gas (PDR) Molecular very dense gas Young stars in formation Schematic representation of star-forming region

  16. III a III IV II.a. Molecular extended gas (PDR) Spatial scales !!! Stars already formed, UV & FUV sources Galactic PDR gas : n(H2) ≤ 104-5 cm-3 Temperature ~ 40-150 K Lifetime > 105 yrs Atomic and molecular chemical abundances Molecular extended gas (PDR) Schematic representation of star-forming region

  17. III a III IV II.a. Molecular extended gas (PDR) NGC 253 He 2-10 Observations: Overlap Bayet et al, 2004, A&A, 427, 45 Bayet et al., 2006, A&A, 460, 467 Caltech Submillimeter Observatory (CSO) NGC 253

  18. III a III IV II.a. Molecular extended gas (PDR) Models  ISM properties PDR (Meudon) model LVG model TK , <σv> and density are uniform Line of sight 0D model Spherical geometry Equation of statistical equilibrium + collision rates Velocity = fo(radius) TK and density uniform Radiation intensity = fo(S;escape probabilities of a photon emitted by the molecular transition) ONE MOLECULE ONLY !!  TB  Amb Level population + uniform throughout the cloud 1D model Steady state Radiative transfer solved (dust and line absorptions) Heating and cooling processes Thermal balance Chemical network  MULTI-MOLECULES !!! Plan-// geometry  Imb

  19. III a III IV II.a. Molecular extended gas (PDR) Results  Observed and predicted SEDs Bayet et al., 2006, A&A, 460, 467 C and CO cooling rates obtained for about 10 nearby galaxies Whatever the galaxy

  20. III a III IV II. PDR-like gas B)Models  ISM properties Bayet et al., 2006, A&A, 460, 467

  21. III b III IV II.b. Molecular very dense gas Spatial scales !!! Stars already formed, UV & FUV sources Ionized gas Atomic gas Density increase Molecular extended gas (PDR) Molecular very dense gas Young stars in formation Schematic representation of star-forming region

  22. III b III IV II.b. Molecular very dense gas Spatial scales !!! Stars already formed, UV & FUV sources Galactic very dense gas : n(H2) ~ 107 cm-3 Temperature > 100 K Lifetime ~ 105 yrs Chemical abundances anomalously high (NH3, H2O, HCOOCH3…) Molecular very dense gas Observations in external galaxies? Not really, HCN not a good tracer… Young stars in formation Models  Predictions Schematic representation of star-forming region

  23. III b III IV II.b. Molecular very dense gas Spatial scales !!! Stars already formed, UV & FUV sources Galactic very dense gas : n(H2) ~ 107 cm-3 Temperature > 100 K Lifetime ~ 105 yrs Chemical abundances anomalously high (NH3, H2O, HCOOCH3…) Molecular very dense gas Observations in external galaxies? Not really, HCN not a good tracer… Young stars in formation Models  Predictions Use of the UCL chemical model to derive the dense gas properties complementary information on the chemical and physical properties of high mass star regions

  24. III b III IV II.b. Molecular very dense gas PHASE 1 : contraction of the cloud until a limit density  star formed Temperature is very cold (10 K) thus molecules are frozen out onto the grains B)Models  Predictions Schematic representation of dense region PHASE 2 : evaporation massive star formed instantaneously T (300 K) Molecules stuck are released in the gas phase since grains are violently heated FORMATION OF THE DENSE GAS CHEMISTRY : tracers identified !! Molecular cloud - PDR Formation of the protostar by itself not included !!! Molecular cloud - PDR

  25. III b III IV II.b. Molecular very dense gas Models  Predictions “quiet” environment = Milky Way standard values used limit of detectability: relative abundance = 10-12 Bayet et al. 2008a, ApJ, 676, 978

  26. III b III IV z = z0 II.b. Molecular very dense gas z = 1/10z0 z = 1/100z0 Models  Predictions z =1/1000 z0 Variations of input parameters: metallicity (z) FUV radiation field Cosmic ray ionisation rate Temperature, … Bayet et al. 2008a, ApJ, 676, 978

  27. III b III IV II.b. Molecular very dense gas Models  Predictions Bayet et al. 2008a, ApJ, 676, 978 Useful for the preparation of future observations with ALMA

  28. III b IIIIV II.b. Molecular very dense gas Observations Purpose : Validation of model predictions  Physical parameters of this dense gas to derive  Comparison with “C, CO” gas properties (see Sect. IV) JCMT Molecule CS : lines critical densities from 105 to 107 cm-3 well known spectroscopically Transitions observed from CS(2-1) to CS(7-6) various galaxies !!! IRAM-30m

  29. III b IIIIV Antennae A)Observations Bayet et al. 2009c, ApJ, 707,126

  30. M 82 PreambleI IIIIIa IV V Weiss et al., 2001, A&A, 365, 571 III. Dense gas A)Observations Bayet et al. 2009c, ApJ, 707, 126 Bayet et al. 2008b, ApJL, 685, 33 Bayet et al. 2009c, ApJ, 707, 126

  31. III b IIIIV II.b. Molecular very dense gas Observations  ISM properties Bayet et al. 2009b, ApJ, 707, 126

  32. I II bIII IV III. Molecules useful for inferring SF activity? Chemical model: very dense gas UCL_PDR model: PDR-like gas Schematic representation of hot core Molecular cloud - PDR Viti & Williams, 1999, MNRAS, 305, 705 Viti et al., 2001, A&A, 370, 1071 Bell et al., 2006, MNRAS, 371, 1875 Bell et al., 2007, MNRAS, 378, 983 Molecular cloud - PDR

  33. I II bIII IV III. Molecules useful for inferring SF activity? Chemical model: very dense gas UCL_PDR model: PDR-like gas z = z0 z = z0 z = 1/10z0 z = ½ z0 z = ¼ z0 z = 1/100z0 z = 1/10 z0 z =1/1000 z0 z =1/100 z0 Bayet et al. 2009a, ApJ, 696, 1466 Bayet et al. 2008a, ApJ, 676, 978

  34. I II bIII IV III. Molecules useful for inferring SF activity? UCL_PDR model: PDR-like gas Chemical model: very dense gas Bayet et al. 2009a, ApJ, 696, 1466 Bayet et al. 2008a, ApJ, 676, 978 Observational campaign to perform  able to disentangle nuclear activity? New tools for ALMA & Herchel ?

  35. I II b III IV IV. Conclusions and Perspectives II.a.Molecular extended gas (PDR) : UNTIL NOW :  Observations : C and CO lines at high frequencies never obtained before(nearby sources)  SED : cooling rates determined for the typical PDR gas as traced by C and CO lines  Models : physical properties of PDR gas determined NEXT ? : Interferometric data  GMCs (obs + models) II.b. Molecular very dense gas : UNTIL NOW :  Models: tracers of dense gas in various types of galaxies identified + study of their abundance variations with physical conditions  Observations : CS never obtained before + lower limit for N(CS) and TK of dense star-forming gas in various galaxies

  36. I II b III IV IV. Conclusions and Perspectives NEXT ?: - Models: use RT, LVG models for deriving the ISM physical properties of this dense gas - Observations : observe not only CS ! Maps? III. Molecules useful for inferring SF activity? UNTIL NOW :  identified various differences in tracers for both gas in various types of galaxies (nuclear activity) NEXT ? :- Confirm these differences observationally speaking - Increase the comparison adding real XDR model predictions IV. Perspective works : 1) Comparison with the dust emission : complementary information on conditions

  37. PreambleI II III IV V IRAM Plateau de Bure Interferometer (IRAM-PdB) V. Conclusions and perspective Bayet et al. (in prep) Spatial resolution of 6.01’’ x 4.86’’ at 115 GHz : IC 10 Superimposition of the 12C0(1-0) emission (black contours : 1-15 Jy/beam.kms-1) with the λ~7 μm emission The Antennae Galaxies - CO(1-0) from Wilson et al.(200) with OVRO - Other from Bayet et al. (in prep) with Spitzer Bayet et al. (in prep)

  38. I II b III IV IV. Conclusions and Perspectives Deuterated chemistry in external galaxies Density (cm-3) 105 106 107 105 106 107 105 106 107 105 106 107 105 106 107 IN PROGRESS !!! See Poster of Zainab Awad

  39. I II b III IV IV. Conclusions and Perspectives Herschel ALMA Thank you !

More Related