2016A&A...586A.114M


Query : 2016A&A...586A.114M

2016A&A...586A.114M - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 586A, 114-114 (2016/2-1)

Detecting stellar-wind bubbles through infrared arcs in HII regions.

MacKEY J., HAWORTH T.J., GVARAMADZE V.V., MOHAMED S., LANGER N. and HARRIES T.J.

Abstract (from CDS):

Mid-infrared arcs of dust emission are often seen near ionizing stars within HII regions. A possible explanations for these arcs is that they could show the outer edges of asymmetric stellar wind bubbles. We use two-dimensional, radiation-hydrodynamics simulations of wind bubbles within HII regions around individual stars to predict the infrared emission properties of the dust within the HII region. We assume that dust and gas are dynamically well-coupled and that dust properties (composition, size distribution) are the same in the HII region as outside it, and that the wind bubble contains no dust. We post-process the simulations to make synthetic intensity maps at infrared wavebands using the torus code. We find that the outer edge of a wind bubble emits brightly at 24µm through starlight absorbed by dust grains and re-radiated thermally in the infrared. This produces a bright arc of emission for slowly moving stars that have asymmetric wind bubbles, even for cases where there is no bow shock or any corresponding feature in tracers of gas emission. The 24µm intensity decreases exponentially from the arc with increasing distance from the star because the dust temperature decreases with distance. The size distribution and composition of the dust grains has quantitative but not qualitative effects on our results. Despite the simplifications of our model, we find good qualitative agreement with observations of the HII region RCW120, and can provide physical explanations for any quantitative differences. Our model produces an infrared arc with the same shape and size as the arc around CD-38°11636 in RCW120, and with comparable brightness. This suggests that infrared arcs around O stars in HII regions may be revealing the extent of stellar wind bubbles, although we have not excluded other explanations.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): hydrodynamics - radiative transfer - methods: numerical - HII regions - ISM: bubbles - stars: winds, outflows

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 * lam Ori ** 05 35 08.27761 +09 56 02.9611 2.45 3.48 3.66 3.72 3.89 O8IIIf+B0.5V 303 0
2 M 42 HII 05 35 17 -05 23.4           ~ 4076 0
3 * sig Ori Y*O 05 38 44.7653828520 -02 36 00.283179888 2.54 3.58 3.79 3.87 4.11 O9.5V+B0.2V(n) 801 0
4 IC 434 HII 05 41 -02.5           ~ 89 1
5 NAME Rosette Nebula HII 06 32 26.76 +04 47 37.1           ~ 492 1
6 HD 50896 WR* 06 54 13.0439608392 -23 55 42.023319852 5.74 6.63 6.91 7.74   WN4b 774 0
7 NGC 2467 OpC 07 52 18 -26 25.7           ~ 186 1
8 HD 64315 Em* 07 52 20.2841727949 -26 25 46.683038109 8.76 9.49 9.24 9.63 8.86 O5.5Vz+O7V 117 1
9 RCW 82 HII 13 59.3 -61 27           ~ 30 0
10 CD-38 11636 * 17 12 20.8455264407 -38 29 30.394099276 12 11.90 10.87 10.42   O8 45 1
11 SH 2-3 HII 17 12.4 -38 28           ~ 205 1
12 MR 80 WR* 18 02 04.1244400656 -23 37 42.168277056   15.002 13.155 12.056   WC9 229 1
13 [L89b] 28.823-00.226 bub 18 44 44.3 -03 45 34           ~ 78 0
14 [KB94] 12 HII 18 48 39.9 -01 37 49           ~ 4 0
15 NGC 7635 HII 23 20 48.3 +61 12 06           ~ 172 2

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