Resolving the shocked gas in HH54 with Herschel : CO line mapping at high spatial and spectral resolution

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Resolving the shocked gas in HH54 with Herschel : CO line mapping at high spatial and spectral resolution. / Bjerkeli, P.; Liseau, R.; Brinch, C.; Olofsson, G.; Santangelo, G.; Cabrit, S.; Benedettini, M.; Black, J. H.; Herczeg, G.; Justtanont, K.; Kristensen, L. E.; Larsson, B.; Nisini, B.; Tafalla, M.

In: Astronomy & Astrophysics, Vol. 571, A60, 01.11.2014.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Bjerkeli, P, Liseau, R, Brinch, C, Olofsson, G, Santangelo, G, Cabrit, S, Benedettini, M, Black, JH, Herczeg, G, Justtanont, K, Kristensen, LE, Larsson, B, Nisini, B & Tafalla, M 2014, 'Resolving the shocked gas in HH54 with Herschel : CO line mapping at high spatial and spectral resolution', Astronomy & Astrophysics, vol. 571, A60. https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201424789

APA

Bjerkeli, P., Liseau, R., Brinch, C., Olofsson, G., Santangelo, G., Cabrit, S., Benedettini, M., Black, J. H., Herczeg, G., Justtanont, K., Kristensen, L. E., Larsson, B., Nisini, B., & Tafalla, M. (2014). Resolving the shocked gas in HH54 with Herschel : CO line mapping at high spatial and spectral resolution. Astronomy & Astrophysics, 571, [A60]. https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201424789

Vancouver

Bjerkeli P, Liseau R, Brinch C, Olofsson G, Santangelo G, Cabrit S et al. Resolving the shocked gas in HH54 with Herschel : CO line mapping at high spatial and spectral resolution. Astronomy & Astrophysics. 2014 Nov 1;571. A60. https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201424789

Author

Bjerkeli, P. ; Liseau, R. ; Brinch, C. ; Olofsson, G. ; Santangelo, G. ; Cabrit, S. ; Benedettini, M. ; Black, J. H. ; Herczeg, G. ; Justtanont, K. ; Kristensen, L. E. ; Larsson, B. ; Nisini, B. ; Tafalla, M. / Resolving the shocked gas in HH54 with Herschel : CO line mapping at high spatial and spectral resolution. In: Astronomy & Astrophysics. 2014 ; Vol. 571.

Bibtex

@article{13bdc6cb98c644b78586dc29037e5e1b,
title = "Resolving the shocked gas in HH54 with Herschel : CO line mapping at high spatial and spectral resolution",
abstract = "Context. The HH 54 shock is a Herbig-Haro object, located in the nearby Chamaeleon II cloud. Observed CO line profiles are due to a complex distribution in density, temperature, velocity, and geometry. Aims. Resolving the HH 54 shock wave in the far-infrared (FIR) cooling lines of CO constrain the kinematics, morphology, and physical conditions of the shocked region. Methods. We used the PACS and SPIRE instruments on board the Herschel space observatory to map the full FIR spectrum in a region covering the HH 54 shock wave. Complementary Herschel-HIFI, APEX, and Spitzer data are used in the analysis as well. The observed features in the line profiles are reproduced using a 3D radiative transfer model of a bow-shock, constructed with the Line Modeling Engine code (LIME). Results. The FIR emission is confined to the HH 54 region and a coherent displacement of the location of the emission maximum of CO with increasing J is observed. The peak positions of the high-J CO lines are shifted upstream from the lower J CO lines and coincide with the position of the spectral feature identified previously in CO (10−9) profiles with HIFI. This indicates a hotter molecular component in the upstream gas with distinct dynamics. The coherent displacement with increasing J for CO is consistent with a scenario where IRAS12500 – 7658 is the exciting source of the flow, and the 180 K bow-shock is accompanied by a hot (800 K) molecular component located upstream from the apex of the shock and blueshifted by −7 km s-1. The spatial proximity of this knot to the peaks of the atomic fine-structure emission lines observed with Spitzer and PACS ([O i]63, 145 μm) suggests that it may be associated with the dissociative shock as the jet impacts slower moving gas in the HH 54 bow-shock.",
author = "P. Bjerkeli and R. Liseau and C. Brinch and G. Olofsson and G. Santangelo and S. Cabrit and M. Benedettini and Black, {J. H.} and G. Herczeg and K. Justtanont and Kristensen, {L. E.} and B. Larsson and B. Nisini and M. Tafalla",
year = "2014",
month = nov,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1051/0004-6361/201424789",
language = "English",
volume = "571",
journal = "Astronomy & Astrophysics",
issn = "0004-6361",
publisher = "E D P Sciences",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Resolving the shocked gas in HH54 with Herschel

T2 - CO line mapping at high spatial and spectral resolution

AU - Bjerkeli, P.

AU - Liseau, R.

AU - Brinch, C.

AU - Olofsson, G.

AU - Santangelo, G.

AU - Cabrit, S.

AU - Benedettini, M.

AU - Black, J. H.

AU - Herczeg, G.

AU - Justtanont, K.

AU - Kristensen, L. E.

AU - Larsson, B.

AU - Nisini, B.

AU - Tafalla, M.

PY - 2014/11/1

Y1 - 2014/11/1

N2 - Context. The HH 54 shock is a Herbig-Haro object, located in the nearby Chamaeleon II cloud. Observed CO line profiles are due to a complex distribution in density, temperature, velocity, and geometry. Aims. Resolving the HH 54 shock wave in the far-infrared (FIR) cooling lines of CO constrain the kinematics, morphology, and physical conditions of the shocked region. Methods. We used the PACS and SPIRE instruments on board the Herschel space observatory to map the full FIR spectrum in a region covering the HH 54 shock wave. Complementary Herschel-HIFI, APEX, and Spitzer data are used in the analysis as well. The observed features in the line profiles are reproduced using a 3D radiative transfer model of a bow-shock, constructed with the Line Modeling Engine code (LIME). Results. The FIR emission is confined to the HH 54 region and a coherent displacement of the location of the emission maximum of CO with increasing J is observed. The peak positions of the high-J CO lines are shifted upstream from the lower J CO lines and coincide with the position of the spectral feature identified previously in CO (10−9) profiles with HIFI. This indicates a hotter molecular component in the upstream gas with distinct dynamics. The coherent displacement with increasing J for CO is consistent with a scenario where IRAS12500 – 7658 is the exciting source of the flow, and the 180 K bow-shock is accompanied by a hot (800 K) molecular component located upstream from the apex of the shock and blueshifted by −7 km s-1. The spatial proximity of this knot to the peaks of the atomic fine-structure emission lines observed with Spitzer and PACS ([O i]63, 145 μm) suggests that it may be associated with the dissociative shock as the jet impacts slower moving gas in the HH 54 bow-shock.

AB - Context. The HH 54 shock is a Herbig-Haro object, located in the nearby Chamaeleon II cloud. Observed CO line profiles are due to a complex distribution in density, temperature, velocity, and geometry. Aims. Resolving the HH 54 shock wave in the far-infrared (FIR) cooling lines of CO constrain the kinematics, morphology, and physical conditions of the shocked region. Methods. We used the PACS and SPIRE instruments on board the Herschel space observatory to map the full FIR spectrum in a region covering the HH 54 shock wave. Complementary Herschel-HIFI, APEX, and Spitzer data are used in the analysis as well. The observed features in the line profiles are reproduced using a 3D radiative transfer model of a bow-shock, constructed with the Line Modeling Engine code (LIME). Results. The FIR emission is confined to the HH 54 region and a coherent displacement of the location of the emission maximum of CO with increasing J is observed. The peak positions of the high-J CO lines are shifted upstream from the lower J CO lines and coincide with the position of the spectral feature identified previously in CO (10−9) profiles with HIFI. This indicates a hotter molecular component in the upstream gas with distinct dynamics. The coherent displacement with increasing J for CO is consistent with a scenario where IRAS12500 – 7658 is the exciting source of the flow, and the 180 K bow-shock is accompanied by a hot (800 K) molecular component located upstream from the apex of the shock and blueshifted by −7 km s-1. The spatial proximity of this knot to the peaks of the atomic fine-structure emission lines observed with Spitzer and PACS ([O i]63, 145 μm) suggests that it may be associated with the dissociative shock as the jet impacts slower moving gas in the HH 54 bow-shock.

U2 - 10.1051/0004-6361/201424789

DO - 10.1051/0004-6361/201424789

M3 - Journal article

VL - 571

JO - Astronomy & Astrophysics

JF - Astronomy & Astrophysics

SN - 0004-6361

M1 - A60

ER -

ID: 138896455