Back to Search Start Over

Infrared observations of the flaring maser source G358.93-0.03: SOFIA confirms an accretion burst from a massive young stellar object

Authors :
Mark Gurwell
Hendrik Linz
J.L. Van der Walt
Claudia Cyganowski
C. Fischer
A. E. Volvach
Gabriele Surcis
Ross A. Burns
Andrej M. Sobolev
V. Wolf
J. Eislöffel
Sylvio Klose
O. Bayandina
Bringfried Stecklum
Crystal L. Brogan
Koichiro Sugiyama
A. Caratti o Garatti
G. C. MacLeod
Gabor Orosz
Yoshinori Yonekura
Kee-Tae Kim
S. Schmidl
Naomi Hirano
Karl M. Menten
M. Olech
Todd R. Hunter
T. K. Sridharan
ITA
USA
GBR
DEU
CAN
TWN
KOR
JPN
IRL
NLD
POL
CHN
ZAF
RUS
University of St Andrews. School of Physics and Astronomy
Source :
Astron. Astrophys., Astronomy and Astrophysics
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
EDP Sciences, 2021.

Abstract

Class II methanol masers are signs of massive young stellar objects (MYSOs). Recent findings show that MYSO accretion bursts cause flares of these masers. Thus, maser monitoring can be used to identify such bursts. Burst-induced SED changes provide valuable information on a very intense phase of high-mass star formation. In mid-January 2019, a maser flare of the MYSO G358.93-0.03 was reported. ALMA and SMA imaging resolved the core of the star forming region and proved the association of the masers with the brightest continuum source MM1. However, no significant flux rise of the (sub)mm dust continuum was found. Thus, we performed NIR imaging with GROND and IFU spectroscopy with FIFI-LS aboard SOFIA to detect possible counterparts to the (sub)mm sources, and compare their photometry to archival measurements. The comparison of pre-burst and burst SEDs is of crucial importance to judge whether a luminosity increase due to the burst is present and if it triggered the maser flare. The FIR fluxes of MM1 measured with FIFI-LS exceed those from Herschel significantly, which clearly confirms the presence of an accretion burst. The second epoch data, taken about 16 months later, still show increased fluxes. Our RT modeling yielded major burst parameters and suggests that the MYSO features a circumstellar disk which might be transient. From the multi-epoch SEDs, conclusions on heating and cooling time-scales could be drawn. Circumstances of the burst-induced maser relocation have been explored. The verification of the accretion burst from G358 is another confirmation that Class II methanol maser flares represent an alert for such events. The few events known to date already indicate that there is a broad range in burst strength and duration as well as environmental characteristics. The G358 event is the shortest and least luminous MYSO accretion burst so far.<br />Comment: 22 pages, 11 figures, accepted by A&A. Abstract abridged for arxiv submission

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Astron. Astrophys., Astronomy and Astrophysics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ad6b36513104ca34de9dae7b46d25686