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Disks, toroids and the formation of massive stars. Riccardo Cesaroni O-B star >10 3 L O >8 M O high-mass. Observations : where do (massive) stars form? Theory : how do (massive) stars form? Search for disks in high-mass (proto)stars
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Disks, toroids and the formationof massive stars Riccardo Cesaroni O-B star >103 LO >8 MO high-mass • Observations: where do (massive) stars form? • Theory: how do (massive) stars form? • Search for disks in high-mass (proto)stars • Results: disks in B stars, toroids in O stars • Implications: different formation scenarios for B and O stars?
High-mass star forming regions: Observational problems • IMF high-mass stars are rare • large distance: >400 pc, typically a few kpc • formation in clusters confusion • rapidevolution: tacc=20 MO /10-3MOyr-1=2104yr • parental environment profoundly altered • Advantage: • very luminous (cont. & line) and rich (molecules)!
G9.62+0.19 NIR J+H+K 10 pc
G9.62+0.19 350 micron 0.5 pc Hunter et al. (2000)
3.6cm Testi et al. Cesaroni et al.
High-mass star forming region 0.5 pc
Clump UCHII HMC Core
Clump UCHII HMC
Clump HMC
Clumps and hot molecular cores • Rclump = 10 RHMC • Mclump= 10 MHMC • nclump = 0.01 nHMC
nR-pwith p=1.5-2.5 no break at HMC • unstable density profile • Mclump > Mvirial clumps unstable • Vclump = VHMC HMCs at rest wrt clumps • TR-q with q=0.4-0.5 clumps centrally heated • Clumps might be collapsing • HMCs are density peaks in clumps • HMCs are T peaks “enlightened’’ by embedded stars
HMC Clump nH2 R-2.6 Fontani et al. (2002)
nR-pwith p=1.5-2.5 no break at HMC • unstable density profile • Mclump > Mvirial clumps unstable • Vclump = VHMC HMCs at rest wrt clumps • TR-q with q=0.4-0.5 clumps centrally heated • Clumps might be collapsing • HMCs are density peaks in clumps • HMCs are T peaks “enlightened’’ by embedded stars
Fontani et al. (2002) sample of 12 Clumps
nH2R-pwith p=1.5-2.5 no break at HMC • unstable density profile • Mclump > Mvirial clumps unstable • Vclump = VHMC HMCs at rest wrt clumps • TR-qwith q=0.4-0.5 clumps centrally heated • Clumps might be collapsing • HMCs are density peaks in clumps • HMCs are T peaks “enlightened’’ by embedded stars • HMCs are deeply related to clumps
nH2R-pwith p=1.5-2.5 no break at HMC • unstable density profile • Mclump > Mvirial clumps unstable • Vclump = VHMC HMCs at rest wrt clumps • TR-qwith q=0.4-0.5 clumps centrally heated • Clumps might be collapsing • HMCs are density peaks in clumps • HMCs are T peaks “enlightened’’by embedded stars • HMCs are deeply related to clumps
Low-mass vs High-mass Shu et al. (1987): star formation from inside-out collapse onto protostar Two relevant timescales: accretion tacc = M*/(dM/dt) contraction tKH = GM*/R*L* • Lowmass (< 8 MO): tacc < tKH “birthline’’ • Highmass (> 8 MO): tacc > tKH accretion onZAMS
Palla & Stahler (1990) tKH=tacc dM/dt=10-5 MO/yr Zero-age main sequence Sun
PROBLEM: High-mass stars “switch on” still accreting radiation pressure stops accretion (Kahn 1976) stars > 8 MOcannot form!? SOLUTIONS Yorke (2003): Kdust<Kcrit M*/L* • “Increase’’ M*: large accretion rates • “Reduce’’ L*: non-spherical accretion • Reduce Kdust: large grains (coalescence of lower mass stars)
Possible models • Large accretion rates: competitive accretion (Bonnell et al. 2004); turbulent cores (McKee & Tan 2002) • Non-spherical accretion: disk+outflowfocus ram pressure and dilute radiation pressure (Yorke & Sonnhalter 2002; Krumholz et al. 2003) • Coalescence: many low-mass stars merge into one massive star (Bonnell et al. 2004)
Disk + outflow may be the solution (Yorke & Sonnhalter, Kruhmolz et al.): Outflow channels stellar photons lowers radiation pressure Disk focuses accretion boosts ram pressure Detection of accretion disks would support O-B star formation by accretion, otherwise other mechanisms are needed
Disks in young (proto)stars Disks seem natural outcome of star formation: collapse+angular momentum conservation flattening+rotation speed up disk • Disks detected in low- & intermediate-mass (< 8 MO) pre-main-sequence stars (Simon et al. 2000; Natta et al. 2000) • Disks of a few AU found in young ZAMS B stars (Bik & Thi 2004) • Disks disappear rapidly in intermediate-mass (2-8 MO), pre-main-sequence stars (Fuente et al. 2003)
The search for disks in massive YSOs Disks are likely associated with outflows: outflow detection rate = 40-90% in massive YSOs (luminous IRAS sources, UC HIIs, H2O masers,…) (Osterloh et al., Beuther et al., Zhang et al., …) • disks should be widespread! BUT… Where and what to search for…?
disk? Where to search for? 0.5 pc
disk outflow outflow What to search for? Theorist’s definition: Disk = long-lived, flat, rotating structure in centrifugal equilibrium Observer’s definition: Disk = elongated structure with velocity gradient perpendicular to outflow axis core
Toroids M > 100 MO R ~ 10000 AU L > 105 LO (O stars) (dM/dt)star > 10-3 MO/yr trot~ 105 yr tacc~ M/(dM/dt)star~ 104 yr tacc << trot non-equilibrium, circum-cluster structures Disks M < 10 MO R ~ 1000 AU L ~ 104 LO (B stars) (dM/dt)star ~ 10-4 MO/yr trot~ 104 yr tacc~ M/(dM/dt)star~ 105 yr tacc >> trot equilibrium, circumstellar structures Results of disk searchTwo types of objects found:
Furuya et al. (2002) Beltran et al. (2004) Beltran et al. (2005)
Furuya et al. (2002) Beltran et al. (2004) Beltran et al. (2005)
Furuya et al. (2002) Beltran et al. (2004) Beltran et al. (2005)
Furuya et al. (2002) Beltran et al. (2004) Beltran et al. (2005)
Furuya et al. (2002) Beltran et al. (2004) Beltran et al. (2005)
Mdyn= 19 MO Mdyn= 55 MO Furuya et al. (2002) Beltran et al. (2004,2005) Moscadelli et al. (2007)
First result: • velocity gradient perpendicular to bipolar outflow rotatingtoroid • conservation of angular momentum from 2” (15000 AU) to 0.5” (4000 AU) possible formation of circumstellardisk?
absorption HC HII hypercompact HII +dust O9.5 (20 MO) + 130 MO outflow axis
Beltran et al. (2006, Nature) outflow axis
Second result: • Red-shifted absorption in molecular line towards HII region infall towards star accretion onto star?
Hypercompact HII region Moscadelli et al. (2007) Beltran et al. (2007) 7mm free-free & H2O masers 500 AU
Hypercompact HII region Moscadelli et al. (2007) Beltran et al. (2007) 7mm free-free & H2O masers 30 km/s
Third result: • H2O masers along HII region border have proper motions away from star expansion of shell HII region with tHII = 500 AU/50 km/s = 50 yr !!! note that this is distance independent hyperyoung HII region
Final scenario: • G24 A1 is a massive toroid, rotating about a bipolar outflow and infalling towards an O star with very young expanding HII region a 20 MO star has been formed through accretion (now finished…?)
IRAS 20126+4104 Cesaroni et al. Hofner et al. Moscadelli et al. Keplerian rotation: M*=7 MO Moscadelli et al. (2005)
Toroids M > 100 MO R ~ 10000 AU L > 105 LO (O stars) (dM/dt)star > 10-3 MO/yr trot~ 105 yr tacc~ M/(dM/dt)star~ 104 yr tacc << trot non-equilibrium, circum-cluster structures Disks M < 10 MO R ~ 1000 AU L ~ 104 LO (B stars) (dM/dt)star ~ 10-4 MO/yr trot~ 104 yr tacc~ M/(dM/dt)star~ 105 yr tacc >> trot equilibrium, circumstellar structures Results of disk searchTwo types of objects found: