Variable SiO Maser Emission from V838 Mon Mark Claussen May 16, 2006 Nature of V838 Mon and its Light Echo.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
HCN Near IK Tau and TX Cam Kevin Marvel American Astronomical Society Waikoloa Beach Outrigger Resort Kona-Kailua, Hawaii Monday July 1, 2002.
Advertisements

Methanol maser polarization in W3(OH) Lisa Harvey-Smith Collaborators: Vlemmings, Cohen, Soria-Ruiz Joint Institute for VLBI in Europe.
Masers and Massive Star Formation Claire Chandler Overview: –Some fundamental questions in massive star formation –Clues from masers –Review of three regions:
OH (1720 MHz) Masers: Tracers of Supernova Remnant / Molecular Cloud Interactions Crystal L. Brogan (NRAO) VLBA 10 th Anniversary Meeting June 8-12, 2003.
VLBI observations of two 43-GHz SiO masers in R Cas Jiyune Yi KVN Korea VLBI Network ( KVN ) group Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute In collaboration.
A MOPRA CS(1-0) demonstration survey of the Galactic plane G. Fuller, N. Peretto, L. Quinn (University of Manchester UK), J. Green (ATNF ) All dust continuum.
Studying circumstellar envelopes with ALMA
Loránt Sjouwerman, Ylva Pihlström & Vincent Fish.
A Birth and Growth of a Collimated Molecular Jet from an AGB Star
21 November 2002Millimetre Workshop 2002, ATNF First ATCA results at millimetre wavelengths Vincent Minier School of Physics University of New South Wales.
Asymmetric Planetary Nebulae IV La Palma, Canary Islands Water Fountains in Pre-Planetary Nebulae Mark Claussen, NRAO June 19, 2007 Hancock, New Hampshire.
Portrait of a Forming Massive Protocluster: NGC6334 I(N) Todd Hunter (NRAO/North American ALMA Science Center) Collaborators: Crystal Brogan (NRAO) Ken.
Temporal variations of the circumstellar environment of the Mira star V Oph Keiichi Ohnaka Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie ESO Santiago Seminar.
The Future of the Past Harvard University Astronomy 218 Concluding Lecture, May 4, 2000.
HIGH VELOCITY JETS IN WATER- FOUNTAIN PRE-PLANETARY NEBULAE Mark Claussen, NRAO July 30, 2003 APN III, Mt. Rainier, WA.
We walked around Sinchon midnight, we discovered a white color river, like Milky Way …
Alison Peck, Synthesis Imaging Summer School, 20 June 2002 Spectral Line VLBI Alison Peck SAO/SMA Project.
Star Formation Research Now & With ALMA Debra Shepherd National Radio Astronomy Observatory ALMA Specifications: Today’s (sub)millimeter interferometers.
TURBULENCE AND HEATING OF MOLECULAR CLOUDS IN THE GALACTIC CENTER: Natalie Butterfield (UIowa) Cornelia Lang (UIowa) Betsy Mills (NRAO) Dominic Ludovici.
Molecular absorption in Cen A on VLBI scales Huib Jan van Langevelde, JIVE Ylva Pihlström, NRAO Tony Beasley, CARMA.
Masers observations of Magnetic fields during Massive Star Formation Wouter Vlemmings (Argelander-Institut für Astronomie, Bonn) with Gabriele Surcis,
MASERS Johns Hopkins University, Tuesday, December 12 Microwave Amplification by the Stimulated Emission of Radiation (S) connotes plural.
Magnetic Fields Near the Young Stellar Object IRAS M. J Claussen (NRAO), A. P. Sarma (E. Kentucky Univ), H.A. Wootten (NRAO), K. B. Marvel (AAS),
Water maser emission in Bok globules Bok Globules Bok globules are small (
Panoramic Views of Water Fountain Sources Hiroshi Imai Graduate School of Science and Engineering Kagoshima University A Neapolitan of Masers: Variability,
The overall systematic trends in the kinematics of massive star forming regions Observations of HC 3 N* in hot cores Víctor M. Rivilla 41st Young European.
ATCA monitoring of Sgr A* at 3 millimeter Juan Li Shanghai Astronomical Observatory 2009/10/22 Collaborators: Z.Q. Shen (Shao.), A. Miyazaki (NAOJ), L.
Imaging Compact Supermassive Binary Black Holes with VLBI G. B. Taylor (UNM), C. Rodriguez (UNM), R. T. Zavala (USNO) A. B. Peck (CfA), L. K. Pollack (UCSC),
The Role of Parkes in Southern Maser VLBI Simon Ellingsen University of Tasmania.
ESMA workshop Leiden, 1-2 Feb Evolved Stars eSMA science case for evolved stars (AGB, post-AGB, proto-PNe and PNe) Wouter Vlemmings With various levels.
Moscow presentation, Sept, 2007 L. Kogan National Radio Astronomy Observatory, Socorro, NM, USA EVLA, ALMA –the most important NRAO projects.
VLBI observations of H 2 O masers towards the high-mass Young Stellar Objects in AFGL 5142 Ciriaco Goddi Università di Cagliari, INAF-Osservatorio Astronomico.
Asymmetric Planetary Nebulae IV La Palma, Canary Islands Water Fountains in Pre-Planetary Nebulae Mark Claussen NRAO June 19, 2007 Hancock, New Hampshire.
P-L Relation Compared with the P-L relation from Whitelock & Feast (2000) VLBI results (black) show less scatter than the Hipparcos results (red) Source.
Studying Young Stellar Objects with the EVLA
Protostellar jets and outflows — what ALMA can achieve? — 平野 尚美 (Naomi Hirano) 中研院天文所 (ASIAA)
Masers Surveys with Mopra: Which is best 7 or 3 mm? Simon Ellingsen, Maxim Voronkov & Shari Breen 3 November 2008.
Methanol Masers in the NGC6334F Star Forming Region Simon Ellingsen & Anne-Marie Brick University of Tasmania Centre for Astrophysics of Compact Objects.
64th International Symposium on Molecular Spectroscopy June 22 – 26, 2009 Millimeter Detection of AlO (X 2 Σ + ): Metal Oxide Chemistry in the Envelope.
Early O-Type Stars in the W51-IRS2 Cluster A template to study the most massive (proto)stars Luis Zapata Max Planck Institut für Radioastronomie, GERMANY.
Associating Sites of Methanol Masers at 6.7 GHz in Onsala East Asia VLBI Workshop, Seoul, Korea 2009, 3, Sugiyama, Koichiro 杉山 孝一郎 스기야마 코이치로.
The near-circumstellar environment of TX Cam Athol Kemball (NRAO), Phil Diamond (JBO) and Yiannis Gonidakis (JBO) National Radio Astronomy Observatory.
Hiroshi Imai Graduate School of Science and Engineering Kagoshima University East Asian VLBI Workshop, 2009 March 20.
Mapping the U.S. Scientific Future in VLBI ftp.aoc.nrao.edu/pub/VLBIfuture VLBI Future Committee: Shep.
1 Stellar molecular jets trace by maser emission Hiroshi Imai (Kagoshima University) IAU Symposium 242: 14 March 2007, Alice Springs, Australia.
Low-luminosity Extragalactic H 2 O Masers Yoshiaki Hagiwara ASTRON.
The Mira variable S Ori: SiO maser shells related to the photosphere and dust shell at 3 epochs Markus Wittkowski (ESO), David A. Boboltz (U.S. Naval Observatory),
1 VLBA Orbits of Young Binary Stars Rosa M. Torres – CRyA, UNAM Laurent Loinard – CRyA, UNAM Amy Mioduszewski – DSOC, NRAO Luis F. Rodríguez – CRyA, UNAM.
65th International Symposium on Molecular Spectroscopy June 21 – 25, 2010 Exotic Metal Molecules In Oxygen-Rich Envelopes: Detection of AlOH(X 1 Σ + )
High Redshift Galaxies/Galaxy Surveys ALMA Community Day April 18, 2011 Neal A. Miller University of Maryland.
Cosmic Masers Chris Phillips CSIRO / ATNF. What is a Maser? Microwave Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation Microwave version of a LASER Occur.
ALMA Cycle 0 Observation of Orion Radio Source I Tomoya Hirota (Mizusawa VLBI observatory, NAOJ) Mikyoung Kim (KVN,KASI) Yasutaka Kurono (ALMA,NAOJ) Mareki.
Lecture 16 Measurement of masses of SMBHs: Sphere of influence of a SMBH Gas and stellar dynamics, maser disks Stellar proper motions Mass vs velocity.
1)The recipe of (OB) star formation: infall, outflow, rotation  the role of accretion disks 2)OB star formation: observational problems 3)The search for.
Massive Star-Formation in G studied by means of Maser VLBI and Thermal Interferometric Observations Luca Moscadelli INAF – Osservatorio Astrofisico.
Portrait of a Forming Massive Protocluster: NGC6334 I(N)
High Resolution Submm Observations of Massive Protostars
Signposts of massive star formation
M. J Claussen (NRAO), H. E. Bond (STScI), K. H. Healy, and S
M. J Claussen (NRAO), K. H. Healy, S. Starrfield (ASU), and H. E
Star Formation & The Galactic Center
NRAO-CV Lunch Talk June 2017
VLBI Studies of Circumstellar Masers
Multi-transition VLBA observations of circumstellar SiO masers
MASER Microwave Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation
Wouter Vlemmings, Cornell University Phil Diamond, Jodrell Bank
Millimeter Megamasers and AGN Feedback
Circumstellar SiO masers in long period variable stars
A magnetically collimated jet from an evolved star
EVN observations of OH maser burst in OH
Presentation transcript:

Variable SiO Maser Emission from V838 Mon Mark Claussen May 16, 2006 Nature of V838 Mon and its Light Echo

Main Collaborators Howard E. Bond, STSci Sumner Starrfield, ASU Kevin Healy, ASU May 16, 2006 V838 Mon Mtg

Astronomical Masers Mainly OH, water, SiO, methanol Found in several different places in the universe: – Star-forming regions –Circumstellar shells around late-type stars – Active Galactic Nucleii – Supernova Remnants – V838 Mon Maser emission is bright, easy to observe Radiative transfer is non-linear, pumping schemes not always clear, so interpretation is not easy

SiO Masers J = 1  0 rotational transitions in different vibrationally excited states (v = 1, 2, and 3) These transitions occur at a wavelength of 7mm (~43 GHz) Using the VLA (Very Large Array) we can obtain angular resolution ranging from 60 to 300 mas (depending upon configuration) Using the VLBA (Very Long Baseline Array), the angular resolution can be ~500 microarcseconds (and astrometry even better) Also, radio spectroscopy easily reaches 0.1 km/s spectral resolution

SiO Maser Emission from V838 Mon Non detection in Nov 2003 First detected February 2005 (Deguchi et al.) VLA Monitoring begun in Sep 2005 Position of SiO masers: 07h 04m s -03d 50’ 50.50” position is at least good to 10 mas, compares favorably to USNO stellar position Monthly since then (more or less) VLBA Observations October 2005, January 2006, March 2006 Still under reduction May 16, 2006 V838 Mon Mtg

GBT High Velocity Search for SiO Masers (+/-350 km/s, Oct 2005) no detected high velocity SiO masers VLA Search for Water Masers (monthly check with the SiO monitoring) no water masers detected VLA Search for v=3 SiO (J=1  0) transition (March 2006) no v=3 masers (to a 5-sigma detection limit of 50 mJy/beam) VLA Radio Continuum Search at 8.4 GHz (March 2006) no radio continuum detected (rms 30 uJy/beam at 8.4 GHz) May 16, 2006 V838 Mon Mtg Other Radio Observations of V838 Mon

More Radio Observations VLBA Observations of SiO Masers Peak emission appears unresolved at 0.8 milliarcseconds resolution, but only about 50% of the flux. Some hint of a spatial change across the line May 16, 2006 V838 Mon Mtg

Results of Radio Observations No high velocity maser emission (not in a high velocity outflow) No v=3 emission (no high excitation) No water masers --- pumping ? physical conditions ? no water molecules in the right place ? No radio continuum --- consistent with the possibility of ionization from B3 companion v=1 and v=2 masers are variable over month timescales May 16, 2006 V838 Mon Mtg

Other places for SiO Masers Mira variables, late-type supergiants Pulsating stars Oxygen-rich shells harbor molecular masers: OH, H 2 O, and SiO Masers can probe the kinematics and dynamics of the circumstellar shell May 16, 2006 V838 Mon Mtg

OH H2OH2O SiO AU 100s of AU

Photosphere SiO Masers and Dust Condensation Zone A few stellar radii

TX Cam SiO Masers (Diamond et al.) v = 1, J=1  0 transition Distance ~450 pc Ring diameter 28 mas = 12.6 A.U. 28 mas SiO masers lie a few stellar radii outside the stellar photosphere, but inside the dust condensation zone.

SiO Maser Properties in Mira Variables Collisional pumping / radiatve pumping ? A few (1-2) stellar radii from the stellar surface, inside the dust condensation zone Number density of molecular hydrogen of 5 x 10 9 cm -3 Temperature ~1500 K Tangential amplification explains the rings Optical, IR and SiO masers are correlated over the optical light period SiO masers vary in phase with near and mid-IR Velocity extent of the maser emission ~15 km/s Short-term variability ? Models require the Mira pulsation to explain temporal variability ? May 16, 2006 V838 Mon Mtg.

V838 Mon Masers, Mira Variables, and Parallax At a distance of 7 – 9 kpc, maser ring about 1.8 mas in diameter; barely resolvable by VLBI Turn-on of masers tell us something about pumping scheme --- favors radiative No pulsation ? So variability may not be similar to Miras VLBI of SiO masers holds the possibility of a parallax measurement as well. –50 uas accuracy per measurement epoch, with several epochs over a year should perhaps get to a parallax with rms errors of 15 or 20 uas, depending on systematics Maser polarization observations may tell us something about magnetic fields May 16, 2006 V838 Mon Mtg