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Multiwavelength study of the high-latitude cloud L1642: chain of star formation

Authors :
Malinen, J.
Juvela, M.
Zahorecz, S.
Rivera-Ingraham, A.
Montillaud, J.
Arimatsu, K.
Bernard, J. -Ph.
Doi, Y.
Haikala, L.
Kawabe, R.
Marton, G.
McGehee, P.
Pelkonen, V. -M.
Ristorcelli, I.
Shimajiri, Y.
Takita, S.
Toth, L. V.
Tsukagoshi, T.
Ysard, N.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

L1642 is one of the two high galactic latitude (|b| > 30deg) clouds confirmed to have active star formation. We examine the properties of this cloud, especially the large-scale structure, dust properties, and compact sources in different stages of star formation. We present high-resolution far-infrared and submm observations with the Herschel and AKARI satellites and mm observations with the AzTEC/ASTE telescope, which we combined with archive data from near- and mid-infrared (2MASS, WISE) to mm observations (Planck). The Herschel observations, combined with other data, show a sequence of objects from a cold clump to young stellar objects at different evolutionary stages. Source B-3 (2MASS J04351455-1414468) appears to be a YSO forming inside the L1642 cloud, instead of a foreground brown dwarf, as previously classified. Herschel data reveal striation in the diffuse dust emission around L1642. The western region shows striation towards NE and has a steeper column density gradient on its southern side. The densest central region has a bow-shock like structure showing compression from the west and a filamentary tail extending towards east. The differences suggest that these may be spatially distinct structures, aligned only in projection. We derive values of the dust emission cross-section per H nucleon for different regions of the cloud. Modified black-body fits to the spectral energy distribution of Herschel and Planck data give emissivity spectral index beta values 1.8-2.0 for the different regions. The compact sources have lower beta values and show an anticorrelation between T and beta. Markov chain Monte Carlo calculations demonstrate the strong anticorrelation between beta and T errors and the importance of mm Planck data in constraining the estimates. L1642 reveals a more complex structure and sequence of star formation than previously known.<br />Comment: 22 pages, 18 figures, accepted to Astronomy & Astrophysics; abstract shortened and figures reduced for astroph

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1402.2483
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201323026