7 results on '"Quiroga-Nuñez, L. H."'
Search Results
2. Simulated Galactic methanol maser distribution to constrain Milky Way parameters.
- Author
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Quiroga-Nuñez, L. H., van Langevelde, H. J., Reid, M. J., and Green, J. A.
- Abstract
Context. Using trigonometric parallaxes and proper motions of masers associated with massive young stars, the Bar and Spiral Structure Legacy (BeSSeL) survey has reported the most accurate values of the Galactic parameters so far. The determination of these parameters with high accuracy has a widespread impact on Galactic and extragalactic measurements. Aims. This research is aimed at establishing the confidence with which such parameters can be determined. This is relevant for the data published in the context of the BeSSeL survey collaboration, but also for future observations, in particular from the southern hemisphere. In addition, some astrophysical properties of the masers can be constrained, notably the luminosity function. Methods. We have simulated the population of maser-bearing young stars associated with Galactic spiral structure, generating several samples and comparing them with the observed samples used in the BeSSeL survey. Consequently, we checked the determination of Galactic parameters for observational biases introduced by the sample selection. Results. Galactic parameters obtained by the BeSSeL survey do not seem to be biased by the sample selection used. In fact, the published error estimates appear to be conservative for most of the parameters. We show that future BeSSeL data and future observations with southern arrays will improve the Galactic parameters estimates and smoothly reduce their mutual correlation. Moreover, by modeling future parallax data with larger distance values and, thus, greater relative uncertainties for a larger numbers of sources, we found that parallax-distance biasing is an important issue. Hence, using fractional parallax uncertainty in the weighting of the motion data is imperative. Finally, the luminosity function for 6.7 GHz methanol masers was determined, allowing us to estimate the number of Galactic methanol masers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Finding evolved stars in the inner Galactic disk with Gaia.
- Author
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Quiroga-Nuñez, L. H., van Langevelde, H. J., Pihlström, Y. M., Sjouwerman, L. O., Brown, A. G. A., Recio-Blanco, A., de Laverny, P., Brown, A.G.A., and Prusti, T.
- Abstract
The Bulge Asymmetries and Dynamical Evolution (BAaDE) survey will provide positions and line-of-sight velocities of ~20, 000 evolved, maser bearing stars in the Galactic plane. Although this Galactic region is affected by optical extinction, BAaDE targets may have Gaia cross-matches, eventually providing additional stellar information. In an initial attempt to cross-match BAaDE targets with Gaia, we have found more than 5,000 candidates. Of these, we may expect half to show SiO emission, which will allow us to obtain velocity information. The cross-match is being refined to avoid false positives using different criteria based on distance analysis, flux variability, and color assessment in the mid- and near-IR. Once the cross-matches can be confirmed, we will have a unique sample to characterize the stellar population of evolved stars in the Galactic bulge, which can be considered fossils of the Milky Way formation. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Maser, infrared and optical emission for late-type stars in the Galactic plane.
- Author
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Quiroga-Nuñez, L. H., van Langevelde, H. J., Sjouwerman, L. O., Pihlström, Y. M., Reid, M. J., Brown, A. G. A., Green, J. A., Tarchi, A., Reid, M.J., and Castangia, P.
- Abstract
Radio astrometric campaigns using VLBI have provided distances and proper motions for masers associated with young massive stars (BeSSeL survey). The ongoing BAaDE project plans to obtain astrometric information of SiO maser stars located in the inner Galaxy. These stars are associated with evolved, mass-losing stars. By overlapping optical (Gaia), infrared (2MASS, MSX and WISE) and radio (BAaDE) sources, we expect to obtain important clues on the intrinsic properties and population distribution of late-type stars. Moreover, a comparison of the Galactic parameters obtained with Gaia and VLBI can be done using radio observations on different targets: young massive stars (BeSSeL) and evolved stars (BAaDE). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Millimetre spectral indices of transition disks and their relation to the cavity radius.
- Author
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Pinilla, P., Benisty, M., Birnstiel, T., Ricci, L., Isella, A., Natta, A., Dullemond, C. P., Quiroga-Nuñez, L. H., Henning, T., and Testi, L.
- Subjects
PLANETS ,INTERFEROMETERS ,CELESTIAL mechanics ,SOLAR system ,ASTROPHYSICAL collisions - Abstract
Context. Transition disks are protoplanetary disks with inner depleted dust cavities that are excellent candidates for investigating the dust evolution when there is a pressure bump. A pressure bump at the outer edge of the cavity allows dust grains from the outer regions to stop their rapid inward migration towards the star and to efficiently grow to millimetre sizes. Dynamical interactions with planet(s) have been one of the most exciting theories to explain the clearing of the inner disk. Aims. We look for evidence of millimetre dust particles in transition disks by measuring their spectral index mm with new and available photometric data. We investigate the influence of the size of the dust depleted cavity on the disk integrated millimetre spectral index. Methods. We present the 3-mm (100 GHz) photometric observations carried out with the Plateau de Bure Interferometer of four transition disks: LkHα 330, UX Tau A, LRLL 31, and LRLL 67. We used the available values of their fluxes at 345 GHz to calculate their spectral index, as well as the spectral index for a sample of twenty transition disks. We compared the observations with two kinds of models. In the first set of models, we considered coagulation and fragmentation of dust in a disk in which a cavity is formed by a massive planet located at different positions. The second set of models assumes disks with truncated inner parts at different radii and with power-law dust-size distributions, where the maximum size of grains is calculated considering turbulence as the source of destructive collisions. Results. We show that the integrated spectral index is higher for transition disks (TD) than for regular protoplanetary disks (PD) with mean values of α
TD mm = 2:70 ± 0:13 and αPD mm = 2:20 ± 0:07 respectively. For transition disks, the probability that the measured spectral index is positively correlated with the cavity radius is 95%. High angular resolution imaging of transition disks is needed to distinguish between the dust trapping scenario and the truncated disk case. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2014
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6. EVN observations of 6.7 GHz methanol maser polarization in massive star-forming regions.
- Author
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Surcis, G., Vlemmings, W. H. T., van Langevelde, H. J., Hutawarakorn Kramer, B., and Quiroga-Nuñez, L. H.
- Subjects
STAR formation ,MAGNETIC fields ,METHANOL ,COMPUTER simulation ,VERY long baseline interferometers - Abstract
Context. Magnetic fields have only recently been included in theoretical simulations of high-mass star formation. The simulations show that magnetic fields play an important role in the formation and dynamics of molecular outflows. Masers, in particular 6.7-GHz CH
3 OH masers, are the best probes of the magnetic field morphologies around massive young stellar objects on the smallest scales of 10-100 AU. Aims. Providing new observational measurements of the morphology of magnetic fields around massive young stellar objects by using 6.7-GHz CH3 OH maser emission is very important for setting constraints on the numerical simulations of massive star formation. Methods. This paper focuses on 4 massive young stellar objects, IRAS 06058+2138-NIRS 1, IRAS 22272+6358A, S255-IR, and S231, which complement our previous 2012 sample (the first EVN group). From all these sources, molecular outflows have been detected in the past. Seven of the European VLBI Network antennas were used to measure the linear polarization and Zeeman-splitting of the 6.7-GHz CH3 OH masers in the star-forming regions in this second EVN group. Results. We detected a total of 128 CH3 OH masing cloudlets. Fractional linear polarization (0.8%-11.3%) was detected towards 18% of the CH3 OH masers in our sample. The linear polarization vectors are well ordered in all the massive young stellar objects. We measured significant Zeeman-splitting in IRAS 06058+2138-NIRS 1 (ΔVZ = 3.8 ± 0.6 ms-1 ) and S255-IR (ΔVZ = 3.2 ± 0.7 ms-1 ). Conclusions. By considering the 20 massive young stellar objects towards which the morphology of magnetic fields was determined by observing 6.7-GHz CH3 OH masers in both hemispheres, we find no evident correlation between the linear distributions of CH3 OH masers and the outflows or the linear polarization vectors. On the other hand, we present first statistical evidence that the magnetic field (on scales 10-100 AU) is primarily oriented along the large-scale outflow direction. Moreover, we empirically find that the linear polarization fraction of unsaturated CH3OH masers is Pl < 4.5%. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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7. Astrometric Galactic maser measurements cross-matched with Gaia.
- Author
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Quiroga-Nuñez, L. H., van Langevelde, H. J., Reid, M. J., Sjouwerman, L. O., Pihlström, Y. M., Brown, A. G. A., Green, J. A., Chiappini, Cristina, Minchev, Ivan, Starkenburg, Else, and Valentini, Marica
- Abstract
Using the VLBA, the BeSSeL survey has provided distances and proper motions of young massive stars, allowing an accurate measure of the Galactic spiral structure. By the same technique, we are planning to map the inner Galaxy using positions and velocities of evolved stars (provided by the BAaDE survey). These radio astrometric measurements (BeSSeL and BAaDE) will be complementary to Gaia results and the overlap will provide important clues on the intrinsic properties and population distribution of the stars in the bulge. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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