1 / 30

Stellar jets (I) History; Properties from observations

Stellar jets (I) History; Properties from observations. Highly collimated jets (ejected gas; supersonic velocities) are observed in many classes of astrophysical objects, both stellar and extragalactic (Livio, 2009): Stellar Extragalactic Young Stellar Objects Active Galactic Nuclei

tuwa
Télécharger la présentation

Stellar jets (I) History; Properties from observations

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. Stellar jets(I) History; Properties from observations

  2. Highly collimated jets (ejected gas; supersonic velocities) are observed in many classes of astrophysical objects, both stellar and extragalactic (Livio, 2009): Stellar Extragalactic Young Stellar Objects Active Galactic Nuclei Massive X-Ray Binaries Gamma-Ray Bursts Black Hole X-Ray Transients Low Mass X-Ray Binaries Symbiotic Stars Planetary Nebulae Nuclei Supersoft X-Ray Sources Recurrent Novae Pulsars

  3. NGC 6543 Crab Morphology HH 111 M 87 • HH 111 NGC 6543 Crab Pat Hartigan’s Home Page

  4. Jets most probably requires the presence of an accretion diskaround the central object for the acceleration and collimation mechanism to operate. In the case of YSOs, accretion disksare always presentin those objects with jets. Clear examples are HH 30, DG Tau B, Haro 6-5B and HK Tau. JETS AND DISKS The emission mechanisms in the different classes of objects are very different. Also, are very different their dimensions, densities and velocities. Simply compare YSOs and AGNs. However, the basic mechanism for the acceleration and collimation of the jet is likely to be the same in most if not all of the different classes of objects.

  5. Jet Origin Observations indicate that the jet velocity is always of the order of the escape velocity from the central object. This immediately indicates that most of the outflow originates at the accretion disk close to the central object. HST images of HH 30 and DG Tau B indeed show that the jets are emanating from the central part of the accretion disk.

  6. OPTICAL • Herbig-Haro Objects; discovered in the early 50s • First symposium in 1983 (Bohm, ed.) • 1980s - HH objects part of bipolar outflows (Dopita; Mundt; Graham; Reipurth) • Spectroscopy; proper motion studies; modeling • 1990s - HST … 1994 Herbig & Jones 1981 Bally et al. 2002

  7. HH 212 H2 2,12 mm (NIR, K-band) NH3(disk) protostar Wiseman, J. ApJ, 550, L87 (2001)

  8. NEAR-IR • H2 emission lines discovered in Orion; Gautier 1976 • High-resolution studies of outflows from more embedded sources! • 1980s - spectroscopy; molecular shock physics (theory) • 1990s - First sub-arcsec images; high-resol. spec. (CGS4) - kinematics and excitation - numerical simulations; bows; entrainment Calar Alto 1993 UKIRT 1999 Davis et al. 1994, 2000

  9. (SUB)-MILLIMETRE • Broad CO lines in Orion (Kwan & Scoville 1976) • 1980s - CO surveys in the (Snell, Bally, Edwards, Lada) • 1990s - Higher-energy lines (submm @ JCMT); isotopes; shock chemistry in outflows; entrainment models • Interferometry @ Plateau de Bure, CARMA, SMA - molecular “jets”; study of massive Star-Forming regions. Davis & Eisloeffel 1996 Gueth et al. 1998 Beltran et al. 2004

  10. JETS FROM YSOsHerbig-Haro ObjectsThe history of jets from YSOs began with the discoveryof the Herbig-Haro objects by George Herbig and Guillermo Haro in the late 40’ s of the past century. These enigmatic objects showed rather peculiar characteristics: they were small nebulae (a few tens of arcsec in size), with an strange spectrum (very different from any known at that time) and, most intriguing, far away from any powering source. Herbig’s Catalog (1974)

  11. HH 1-2 Bally et al. AJ 123, 2627 (2002)

  12. Discovered by: **G.H.Herbig(1951): The spectra of two nebulous objects near NGC 1999 (ApJ 113, 697). On a series of direct photographs taken with the Crosslyer reflector in 1946 and 1947 and centered on the diffuse nebula NGC 1999, there appear several peculiar nebulous objects. The brightest of these(referred to hereafter as "No. 1")resembles, on the best plates, a slightly diffuse star with a very short curved, nebulous "tail" extending for 5" in p.a. 52º. Its visual magnitude was estimated at the telescope to be near 16. It lies 1'.0 west and 2'.2 south of BD-6 1253, the illuminating star of NGC 1999. Object No.2, which is 0'.1 east and 4'.1 south of BD6 1253, is composed of two faint stars 9" apart, one much fainter star, and three closely associated semistellar clots of nebulosity; the entire object would be contained in a circle 20" in diameter. It is superimposed on much fainter nebulosity in the form of a ring, and slit spectrograms indicate that still feebler emission nebulosity is present over the entire field. The two brighter stars in object No.2 were estimated to be about visual magnitude 17.5.

  13. and **G. Haro ApJ 115, 572 (1952) In a recently published note G.H.Herbig (ApJ 113,697, 1951) reports the discovery of three peculiar nebulous objects near NGC 1999 and gives the spectroscopic description of the two brightest. The writer had independentlydiscovered these peculiar objects, finding Ha and the [O I] lines at l 6300 and l 6363 in emission in the spectra of them. First spectrophotometric study by: Karl-Heinz Böhm (ApJ 123, 379, 1956) Relative intensities of the emission lines in the spectrum of the brightest Herbig-Haro Object have been determine from three spectrograms taken by Herbig in January, 1955. Therefore, the most obvious means of explaining the ionization is to assume astrong radiation field in the far ultraviolet. If the radiation is produced by a "central star" (of solar dimension) in the nebula, a radiation temperature of 24000° K is required to explain the observed ratio of [ O II] and [OIII].

  14. BUT : ** Deep optical and NIR images fail to detect the embedded star (inside the HH nebulosity) ( Haro, G., Minkowski, R.: 1960, The Herbig-Haro objects near NGC 1999, AJ 65, 490). ** Variability of the HH nebulosities: The nebulosities change their brightness, dissapear and move relative to Field stars with a scale of time of several yrs All of this goes in favour of the exciting source being located outside of the HH nebulosity.

  15. Strom, S. E., Grasdalen, G. L., & Strom, K. M. Infrared and optical observations of Herbig-Haro objects ApJ., 191, 111-142 (1974) HHs=reflection nebulae illuminated by an external source

  16. “old example” BURNHAM NEBULA (HH 255) Burnham Nebula was discovered by Burnham (1984) as a small nebula some arcsec to the south of T-Tau. (Burnham, S.W., Observations of Nebulae with the 36-inch refractor of the Lick Observatory, Pub. Lick Obs., 2, 1689) From high-resolution long-slit spectra in the range 6250-6800 A Emission nebulosities around T-Tau(Böhm & Solf 1994 ApJ, 430, 277).

  17. ASSOCIATED WITH TTS **(Osterbrock, 1958): supersonic gas, ejected by a TTS, excites the surrounding nebula and produces the observed emission lines. **Supersonic stellar wind interaction with the ambient gas Radiative shock HH is created CATALOGS: *Herbig(1974) ~40 objects *Reipurth http://www.astro.umass.edu/catalogs/HHcat/HHintro.html#home (> 1000, in progress)

  18. Today we know that they are just either the brightest parts of the very collimated outflows or jets produced by young stellar objects or in the region of where the jet hits the surrounding medium. The characteristic spectrum is produced in the cooling region of fast shock waves. HH 1/ 2 HH 34

  19. A) Morphology Bipolar with a slight difference in direction between jet and counterjet. Extremely well collimated with small opening angles of no more than a few degrees. Many are not perfectly straight , but show a gradual change in direction or bending. Lengths around a fraction of a parsec, although, in some cases the jet can be traced for several parsecs from the source.Widths between 50-500 AU. They show a series of bright, almost equidistant,knotsinside the body of the jet. Jet properties

  20. Highly collimated morphology wiggling HH30 jet/counterjet system [SII] CCD image Acquired with ACAM (WHT)

  21. “JETS” in ORION HH 270 HH 110 Reipurt & Bally

  22. HH 270 HH 110[SII] CCD image with NOT/ALFOSC More “chaotic” morphology Knot Lack of exciting source? N ~4 ARCMIN

  23. Hartigan et al. (2005), AJ 130, 2197 “curved” morphology +”bow-shock”

  24. Straight morphology Terminal bow-shock IWS

  25. NIR: H2 [FeII] Optical: [SII] H Bow-shock knot 9” (4,000 AU) HH111 (Orion) (Reipurth et al. 1999) Exciting source: YSO surounded by a circunstellar disk

  26. Molecular Outflows High-velocity molecular outflows is a very common phenomenon clearly related to jets in YSOs. When both phenomena are observed, both coincide in direction and sense. They are observed in lines of many molecules, most notably in H2 and CO.

  27. Observations Mostlybipolar. Wider and longer than the jet. Velocities in the range from a few km/s to less than a hundred. Sizes ranging from less than 0.1 pc to several parsecs. Kinematicaltime-scales from about 103 to 105 yr. Masses from a few10-4 to several hundreds Msun. Conclusions So massive that they must consist of accelerated ambient molecular material. The momentum and power of the ionized jet component is usually not enough for the required acceleration. An additional wide-angle wind is probably required to explain the observed morphologies and to easy the momentum problem.

  28. Unified model: molecular outflow/ Jet HHs Optical/Nir wvl Sub and mm wvl

  29. Formation MechanismThe most likely mechanism for thelaunching of the jet from the disk involves hydromagnetic acceleration and collimation. That is, the outflow is initially controlled by astrong magnetic field anchored to the disk and the central object.

More Related