2009ApJ...692...91G


Query : 2009ApJ...692...91G

2009ApJ...692...91G - Astrophys. J., 692, 91-103 (2009/February-2)

The "True" column density distribution in star-forming molecular clouds.

GOODMAN A.A., PINEDA J.E. and SCHNEE S.L.

Abstract (from CDS):

We use the COMPLETE Survey's observations of the Perseus star-forming region to assess and intercompare the three methods used for measuring column density in molecular clouds: near-infrared (NIR) extinction mapping; thermal emission mapping in the far-IR; and mapping the intensity of CO isotopologues. Overall, the structures shown by all three tracers are morphologically similar, but important differences exist among the tracers. We find that the dust-based measures (NIR extinction and thermal emission) give similar, log-normal, distributions for the full (∼20 pc scale) Perseus region, once careful calibration corrections are made. We also compare dust- and gas-based column density distributions for physically meaningful subregions of Perseus, and we find significant variations in the distributions for those (smaller, ∼few pc scale) regions. Even though we have used 12CO data to estimate excitation temperatures, and we have corrected for opacity, the 13CO maps seem unable to give column distributions that consistently resemble those from dust measures. We have edited out the effects of the shell around the B-star HD 278942 from the column density distribution comparisons. In that shell's interior and in the parts where it overlaps the molecular cloud, there appears to be a dearth of 13CO, which is likely due either to 13CO not yet having had time to form in this young structure and/or destruction of 13CO in the molecular cloud by the HD 278942's wind and/or radiation. We conclude that the use of either dust or gas measures of column density without extreme attention to calibration (e.g., of thermal emission zero-levels) and artifacts (e.g., the shell) is more perilous than even experts might normally admit. And, the use of 13CO data to trace total column density in detail, even after proper calibration, is unavoidably limited in utility due to threshold, depletion, and opacity effects. If one's main aim is to map column density (rather than temperature or kinematics), then dust extinction seems the best probe, up to a limiting extinction caused by a dearth of sufficient background sources. Linear fits among all three tracers' estimates of column density are given, allowing us to quantify the inherent uncertainties in using one tracer, in comparison with the others.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): dust, extinction - ISM: abundances - ISM: individual: Perseus molecular complex - ISM: molecules

Simbad objects: 15

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Number of rows : 15
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 NGC 1333 OpC 03 29 11.3 +31 18 36           ~ 1450 1
2 Barnard 1 MoC 03 33 16.3 +31 07 51           ~ 324 0
3 NAME Perseus Cloud SFR 03 35.0 +31 13           ~ 1364 0
4 NAME Per Region reg 03 37 00.0 +31 15 00           ~ 271 0
5 HD 278942 ** 03 39 55.6857090240 +31 55 33.189519540   10.25 9.15     O9.5-B0 53 1
6 IC 348 OpC 03 44 31.7 +32 09 32           ~ 1393 1
7 NAME [BM89] B5 DNe 03 47 38.3 +32 52 43           ~ 223 0
8 LDN 1471 DNe 03 48.0 +32 54           ~ 329 0
9 NAME Taurus Complex SFR 04 41.0 +25 52           ~ 4416 0
10 Barnard 220 DNe 04 41 38.8 +26 00 42           ~ 137 0
11 NAME Ophiuchus Molecular Cloud SFR 16 28 06 -24 32.5           ~ 3631 1
12 LDN 57 DNe 17 22 38.2 -23 49 34           ~ 314 1
13 NAME the Pipe Nebula DNe 17 30 -25.0           ~ 403 1
14 NAME Serpens Cloud SFR 18 29 49 +01 14.8           ~ 1100 2
15 IC 5146 OpC 21 53 29.3 +47 14 46           ~ 467 2

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