Artículo de revista
Herschel far-infrared spectral-mapping of orion bn/kl outflows: spatialdistribution of excited co, h2o, oh, o, and c+ in shocked gas
Fecha
2015Registro en:
The Astrophysical Journal, 799:102 (17pp), 2015 January 20
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/799/1/102
Autor
Goicoechea, Javier R.
Chavarría, Luis
Cernicharo, José
Neufeld, David A.
Vavrek, Roland
Bergin, Edwin A.
Cuadrado, Sara
Encrenaz, Pierre
Etxaluze, Mireya
Melnick, Gary J.
Polehampton, Edward
Institución
Resumen
We present similar to 2; x 2' spectral-maps of Orion Becklin-Neugebauer/Kleinmann-Low (BN/KL) outflows taken with Herschel at similar to 12 '' resolution. For the first time in the far-IR domain, we spatially resolve the emission associated with the bright H-2 shocked regions "Peak 1" and "Peak 2" from that of the hot core and ambient cloud. We analyze the similar to 54-310 mu m spectra taken with the PACS and SPIRE spectrometers. More than 100 lines are detected, most of them rotationally excited lines of (CO)-C-12 (up to J = 48-47), H2O, OH, (CO)-C-13, and HCN. Peaks 1/2 are characterized by a very high L(CO)/L-FIR approximate to 5 x 10(-3) ratio and a plethora of far-IR H2O emission lines. The high-J CO and OH lines are a factor of approximate to 2 brighter toward Peak 1 whereas several excited H2O lines are less than or similar to 50% brighter toward Peak 2. Most of the CO column density arises from T-k similar to 200-500 K gas that we associate with low-velocity shocks that fail to sputter grain ice mantles and show a maximum gas-phase H2O/CO less than or similar to 10(-2) abundance ratio. In addition, the very excited CO (J > 35) and H2O lines reveal a hotter gas component (T-k similar to 2500 K) from faster (v(S) > 25 km s(-1)) shocks that are able to sputter the frozen-out H2O and lead to high H2O/CO greater than or similar to 1 abundance ratios. The H2O and OH luminosities cannot be reproduced by shock models that assume high (undepleted) abundances of atomic oxygen in the preshock gas and/or neglect the presence of UV radiation in the postshock gas. Although massive outflows are a common feature in other massive star-forming cores, Orion BN/KL seems more peculiar because of its higher molecular luminosities and strong outflows caused by a recent explosive event.