Riunione Avanzamento 1 ASI – Roma 11 Novembre 2008 INAF IFSI IRA OAFI OACT UNIRM1 UNIRM2 UNILE 1 SWG3: Evolution of Young Stellar Objects Goals Establish.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
SUMMARY 1.Statistical equilibrium and radiative transfer in molecular (H 2 ) cloud – Derivation of physical parameters of molecular clouds 2.High-mass.
Advertisements

Massive Young Stars in the Galaxy Melvin Hoare University of Leeds UK.
Introduction to Astrophysics
Water In Star-forming regions with Herschel  A 429 hr GT key-program with Herschel to study the physical and chemical structure of star forming regions.
Water In Star-forming regions with Herschel  A 429 hr GT key-program with Herschel to study the physical and chemical structure of star forming regions.
The Birth of Stars Chapter Twenty. Guiding Questions 1.Why do astronomers think that stars evolve? 2.What kind of matter exists in the spaces between.
The Birth of Stars Chapter Twenty. Interstellar gas and dust pervade the Galaxy Interstellar gas and dust, which make up the interstellar medium, are.
Stellar Evolution up to the Main Sequence. Stellar Evolution Recall that at the start we made a point that all we can "see" of the stars is: Brightness.
Protostars, nebulas and Brown dwarfs
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.
From Pre-stellar Cores to Proto-stars: The Initial Conditions of Star Formation PHILIPPE ANDRE DEREK WARD-THOMPSON MARY BARSONY Reported by Fang Xiong,
Roger A. Freedman • William J. Kaufmann III
Cambridge, June 13-16, 2005 A Study of Massive Proto- and Pre-stellar Candidates with the SEST Antenna Maite Beltrán Universitat de Barcelona J. Brand.
e-MERLIN Key Project on Massive Star Formation
STAR FORMATION STUDIES with the CORNELL-CALTECH ATACAMA TELESCOPE Star Formation/ISM Working Group Paul F. Goldsmith (Cornell) & Neal. J. Evans II (Univ.
Star formation across the mass spectrum Our understanding of low-mass (solar type with masses between 0.1 and 10 M SUN ) star formation has improved greatly.
Centimeter and Millimeter Observations of Very Young Binary and Multiple Systems -Orbital Motions and Mass Determination -Truncated Protoplanetary Disks.
The future of astrochemistry of star-forming regions and Hot topics for observers.
Chapter 11 The Lives of Stars. What do you think? Where do stars come from? Do stars with greater or lesser mass last longer?
Stellar Birth Jade J Rachael H. Stages of Stars In the birth of a star there are seven stages in it’s formation. A star's life is a constant battle against.
1 Concept Map for Star Formation accretion disk bipolar jet birth line cloud-cloud collision cocoon cold gas disturbance dust grains fragmentation free.
By Preston B & Kara P (picture of Protostar)
MALT 90 Millimetre Astronomy Legacy Team 90 GHz survey
T HE E VOLUTIONARY C YCLE OF S TARS. C YCLE OF S TARS The 3 major interests (or parameters) of astronomers are their mass, luminosity, their surface temperature.
Star Formation Processes in Stellar Formation Sequence of Events Role of Mass in Stellar Formation Observational Evidence New Theories.
Astronomy 1020-H Stellar Astronomy Spring_2015 Day-33.
ATLASGAL ATLASGAL APEX Telescope Large Area Survey of the Galaxy F. Schuller, K. Menten, P. Schilke, et al. Max Planck Institut für Radioastronomie.
A MINIMUM COLUMN DENSITY FOR O-B STAR FORMATION: AN OBSERVATIONAL TEST Ana López Sepulcre INAF - Osservatorio Astrofisico di Arcetri (Firenze, ITALY) Co-authors:
MeerGAL a high frequency survey of the Southern Galaxy
VLASS – Galactic Science Life cycle of star formation in our Galaxy as a proxy for understanding the Local Universe legacy science Infrared GLIMPSE survey.
Massive Star Formation: The Role of Disks Cassandra Fallscheer In collaboration with: Henrik Beuther, Eric Keto, Jürgen Sauter, TK Sridharan, Sebastian.
Direct Physical Diagnostics of Triggered Star Formation Rachel Friesen NRAO Postdoctoral Fellow North American ALMA Science Center C. Brogan, R. Indebetouw,
Seeing Stars with Radio Eyes Christopher G. De Pree RARE CATS Green Bank, WV June 2002.
Studying Young Stellar Objects with the EVLA
Randolf Klein SOFIA – USRA/NASA Ames July 2014 AASTCS 4: Workshop on Dense Cores - Monterey, CA Issues with SED Fitting, PMS Tracks, and the Birthline.
“The Dusty and Molecular Universe” October 2004
Molecular gas and dust in the Magellanic Clouds C. Bot on behalf of Mónica Rubio Dusty, 29 oct 2004.
Chapter 17 Astro1010-lee.com UVU Survey of Astronomy Chapter 17 Formation of Stars.
Globular Clusters. A globular cluster is an almost spherical conglomeration of 100,000 to 1,000,000 stars of different masses that have practically.
Chapter 11 The Interstellar Medium
The “ Local Group ” of Galaxies Two large spiral galaxies Milky Way & Andromeda (Messier 31 or M31) Distance between them: D = 700 kpc = 2.3 x 10 6 light.
Stellar Birth By: Scott M & Jeremy B By: Scott M & Jeremy B.
Probing the Birth of Super Star Clusters Kelsey Johnson University of Virginia Hubble Symposium, 2005.
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.
1)The environment of star formation 2)Theory: low-mass versus high-mass stars 3)The birthplaces of high-mass stars 4)Evolutionary scheme for high-mass.
Chapter 8 Protostars 4 Emission Nebulae –Interstellar plasma which emits red light 4 Reflection Nebulae –Dust particles which scatter and reflect light.
1 The “ Local Group ” of Galaxies Two large spiral galaxies Milky Way & Andromeda (Messier 31 or M31) Distance between them: D = 700 kpc = 2.3 x 10 6 light.
Universe Tenth Edition
H205 Cosmic Origins  Today: The Origin of Stars  Begin EP 6  Tuesday Evening: John Mather  7:30 Whittenberger APOD.
“Globular” Clusters: M15: A globular cluster containing about 1 million (old) stars. distance = 10,000 pc radius  25 pc “turn-off age”  12 billion years.
Star Formation. Chapter 19 Not on this Exam – On the Next Exam!
1 SIMBA survey of southern high-mass star forming regions Santiago Faúndez (U. de Chile) Leonardo Bronfman(U. de Chile) Guido Garay (U. de Chile) Rolf.
Observability of YSOs with the WISE and AKARI infrared observatories Sarolta Zahorecz Eötvös University, Budapest PhD student, 3. year Thesis advisor:
Stellar Evolution. Structure Mass governs a star’s temperature, luminosity, and diameter Hydrostatic Equilibrium – the balance between gravity squeezing.
Midterm test and marks explored.
Surveys of the Galactic Plane for Massive Young Stellar Objects
A Star is Born! Giant molecular clouds: consist of mostly H2 plus a small amount of other, more complex molecules Dense cores can begin to collapse under.
In Search of More Massive Protostars
Lecture 32- Properties of the Milky Way (cont)
Bolocam Galactic Plane Survey Herschel Hi-GAL Plane Survey
The IR-Radio Correlation in High-Mass Young Stellar Objects
The MALT90 survey of massive star forming regions
Stellar Evolution.
Mizuho Uchiyama (Institute of Astronomy, Univ. of Tokyo)
Signposts of massive star formation
The Birth of Stars.
Star Formation and Interstellar Chemistry
MASER Microwave Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation
Chemical evolution of N2H+ in massive star-forming regions
-Orbital Motions and Mass Determination
Presentation transcript:

Riunione Avanzamento 1 ASI – Roma 11 Novembre 2008 INAF IFSI IRA OAFI OACT UNIRM1 UNIRM2 UNILE 1 SWG3: Evolution of Young Stellar Objects Goals Establish an evolutionary sequence for Massive YSOs SED shapes, bolometric luminosities and temperatures Synergy with IRDCs and Molecular Clouds Derive the timeline for the massive star formation phases Invert object counts in the various phases Measure the Star Formation Rate across the Galaxy Synergy with Global Galactic SF Evolution of YSOs

Riunione Avanzamento 1 ASI – Roma 11 Novembre 2008 INAF IFSI IRA OAFI OACT UNIRM1 UNIRM2 UNILE 2 SWG3: Evolution of Young Stellar Objects Source Classification Tools SEDs automatic building from Hi-GAL and ancillary data (ATLASGAL, Bolocam, JPS, GLIMPSE, MIPSGAL) Distances and luminosities, mainly kinematical distances SED model grids and (L bol,T bol ) diagnostics Automatic source Classification (expert systems?) Pathfinder Samples Start developing the tools on samples of well characterized objects IRDCs, warm cores/protostars, Hot Cores, well characterized HII Massive complementary mm and radio spectroscopy program to provide ancillary data Distances and Bolometric Luminosities Kinematic (mols & HI), association with known sources, maser parallaxes Methods & Tools

Riunione Avanzamento 1 ASI – Roma 11 Novembre 2008 INAF IFSI IRA OAFI OACT UNIRM1 UNIRM2 UNILE 3 SWG3: Evolution of Young Stellar Objects Warm Core Accreting Protostar? Hot Core Very Young High Mass Star Tracers: Warm Dust, Cold Dust, Free-Free Key: Identify sources in various evolutionary stages in complex regions IRAS IRAS Source Classification: Example

Riunione Avanzamento 1 ASI – Roma 11 Novembre 2008 INAF IFSI IRA OAFI OACT UNIRM1 UNIRM2 UNILE 4 SWG3: Evolution of Young Stellar Objects Warm Core Accreting Protostar? Hot Core Very Young High Mass Star Tracers: Warm Dust, Cold Dust, Free-Free Key: Identify sources in various evolutionary stages in complex regions IRAS IRAS Source Classification: Example

Riunione Avanzamento 1 ASI – Roma 11 Novembre 2008 INAF IFSI IRA OAFI OACT UNIRM1 UNIRM2 UNILE 5 SWG3: Evolution of Young Stellar Objects Warm Core Accreting Protostar? Hot Core Very Young High Mass Star Tracers: Warm Dust, Cold Dust, Free-Free Key: Identify sources in various evolutionary stages in complex regions IRAS IRAS Source Classification: Example

Riunione Avanzamento 1 ASI – Roma 11 Novembre 2008 INAF IFSI IRA OAFI OACT UNIRM1 UNIRM2 UNILE 6 SWG3: Evolution of Young Stellar Objects Warm Core Accreting Protostar? Hot Core Very Young High Mass Star Tracers: Warm Dust, Cold Dust, Free-Free Key: Identify sources in various evolutionary stages in complex regions IRAS IRAS Source Classification: Example 10 4 L O = L IRAS L O << L IRAS L IRAS = L O

Riunione Avanzamento 1 ASI – Roma 11 Novembre 2008 INAF IFSI IRA OAFI OACT UNIRM1 UNIRM2 UNILE 7 SWG3: Evolution of Young Stellar Objects Diagnostic Diagram: Example The bolometric luminosity and the circumstellar mass are important age indicators for YSOs. Sources in different evolutionary stages occupy different regions in a L bol - M env diagram. Simple models reproduce (Molinari et al. 2008) the YSOs evolutionary path from pre-ZAMS ( Class 0) through UCHII ( Class I) to Ae-Be ( Class II).