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1)Observations: where do (massive) stars form? 2)Theory: how do (massive) stars form? 3)Search for disks in high-mass (proto)stars 4)Results: disks in B stars, toroids in O stars 5)Implications: different formation scenarios for B and O stars? Disks, toroids and the formation of massive stars Riccardo Cesaroni O-B star >10 3 L O >8 M O high-mass
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High-mass star forming regions: Observational problems IMF high-mass stars are rare large distance: >400 pc, typically a few kpc formation in clusters confusion rapid evolution: t acc =20 M O /10 -3 M O yr -1 =2 10 4 yr parental environment profoundly altered Advantage: very luminous (cont. & line) and rich (molecules)!
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Where do massive stars form?
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Clump UC HII Core HMC
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Clump UC HII HMC
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Clump
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High-mass star forming region 0.5 pc
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Clumps and hot molecular cores R clump = 10 R HMC M clump = 10 M HMC n clump = 0.01 n HMC D (pc)M (M O )n H 2 (cm -3 )T (K) Clump1100010 5 30 HMC0.110010 7 100
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n R -p with p=1.5-2.5 no break at HMC unstable density profile M clump > M virial clumps unstable V clump = V HMC HMCs at rest wrt clumps T R -q with q=0.4-0.5 clumps centrally heated Clumps might be collapsing HMCs are density peaks in clumps HMCs are T peaks “enlightened’’ by embedded stars
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n H 2 R -2.6 ClumpHMC Fontani et al. (2002)
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n R -p with p=1.5-2.5 no break at HMC unstable density profile M clump > M virial clumps unstable V clump = V HMC HMCs at rest wrt clumps T R -q with q=0.4-0.5 clumps centrally heated Clumps might be collapsing HMCs are density peaks in clumps HMCs are T peaks “enlightened’’ by embedded stars
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Fontani et al. (2002) sample of 12 Clumps
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n H 2 R -p with p=1.5-2.5 no break at HMC unstable density profile M clump > M virial clumps unstable V clump = V HMC HMCs at rest wrt clumps T R -q with q=0.4-0.5 clumps centrally heated Clumps might be collapsing HMCs are density peaks in clumps HMCs are T peaks “enlightened’’ by embedded stars HMCs are deeply related to clumps
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n H 2 R -p with p=1.5-2.5 no break at HMC unstable density profile M clump > M virial clumps unstable V clump = V HMC HMCs at rest wrt clumps T R -q with q=0.4-0.5 clumps centrally heated Clumps might be collapsing HMCs are density peaks in clumps HMCs are T peaks “enlightened’’ by embedded stars HMCs are deeply related to clumps
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How do massive stars form?
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Low-mass vs High-mass Shu et al. (1987): star formation from inside-out collapse onto protostar Two relevant timescales: accretion t acc = M * /(dM/dt) contraction t KH = GM * /R * L * Low mass (< 8 M O ): t acc < t KH “birthline’’ High mass (> 8 M O ): t acc > t KH accretion on ZAMS
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Palla & Stahler (1990) dM/dt=10 -5 M O /yr t KH =t acc Zero-age main sequence Sun
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PROBLEM: High-mass stars “switch on” still accreting radiation pressure stops accretion (Kahn 1976) stars > 8 M O cannot form!? SOLUTIONS Yorke (2003): K dust < K crit M * /L * 1)“Increase’’ M * : large accretion rates 2)“Reduce’’ L * : non-spherical accretion 3)Reduce K dust : large grains (coalescence of lower mass stars)
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Possible models 1)Large accretion rates: competitive accretion (Bonnell et al. 2004); turbulent cores (McKee & Tan 2002) 2)Non-spherical accretion: disk+outflow focus ram pressure and dilute radiation pressure (Yorke & Sonnhalter 2002; Krumholz et al. 2003) 3)Coalescence: many low-mass stars merge into one massive star (Bonnell et al. 2004)
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Disk + outflow may be the solution (Yorke & Sonnhalter, Kruhmolz et al.): Outflow channels stellar photons lowers radiation pressure Disk focuses accretion boosts ram pressure Detection of accretion disks would support O-B star formation by accretion, otherwise other mechanisms are needed
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The search for disks in high-mass YSOs
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Disks seem natural outcome of star formation: collapse + angular momentum conservation flattening + rotation speed up disk Disks are likely associated with outflows: outflow detection rate = 40-90% in massive YSOs (luminous IRAS sources, UC HIIs, H 2 O masers,…) (Osterloh et al., Beuther et al., Zhang et al., …) disks should be widespread! BUT… Where and what to search for…?
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Where to search for? 0.5 pc disk?
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outflow Theorist’s definition: Disk = long-lived, flat, rotating structure in centrifugal equilibrium Observer’s definition: Disk = elongated structure with velocity gradient perpendicular to outflow axis core disk What to search for?
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TRACERPROsCONTRAs Maser lines High angular & spectral resolution Unclear geometry & kinematics Continuum Sensitivity (and resolution) No velocity info Confusion with free- free and/or envelope Thermal lines Kinematics and geometry of outflow and disk Limited angular resolution and sensitivity (but see SMA and ALMA)
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Results of disk search Two types of objects found: Toroids M > 100 M O R ~ 10000 AU L > 10 5 L O (O stars) (dM/dt) star > 10 -3 M O /yr t rot ~ 10 5 yr t acc ~ M/(dM/dt) star ~ 10 4 yr t acc << t rot non-equilibrium, circum- cluster structures Disks M < 10 M O R ~ 1000 AU L ~ 10 4 L O (B stars) (dM/dt) star ~ 10 -4 M O /yr t rot ~ 10 4 yr t acc ~ M/(dM/dt) star ~ 10 5 yr t acc >> t rot equilibrium, circumstellar structures
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Examples of rotating toroids:
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Furuya et al. (2002) Beltran et al. (2004) Beltran et al. (2005)
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Furuya et al. (2002) Beltran et al. (2004) Beltran et al. (2005)
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Furuya et al. (2002) Beltran et al. (2004) Beltran et al. (2005)
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Furuya et al. (2002) Beltran et al. (2004) Beltran et al. (2005)
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Furuya et al. (2002) Beltran et al. (2004,2005) Moscadelli et al. (2007) M dyn = 19 M O M dyn = 55 M O
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First result : velocity gradient perpendicular to bipolar outflow rotating toroid conservation of angular momentum from 2” (15000 AU) to 0.5” (4000 AU) possible formation of circumstellar disk?
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outflow axis absorption HC HII hypercompact HII + dust O9.5 (20 M O ) + 130 M O
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outflow axis Beltran et al. (2006, Nature)
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Second result : Red-shifted absorption in molecular line towards HII region infall towards star accretion onto star?
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Hypercompact HII region Moscadelli et al. (2007) Beltran et al. (2007) 7mm free-free & H 2 O masers 500 AU
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Hypercompact HII region Moscadelli et al. (2007) Beltran et al. (2007) 7mm free-free & H 2 O masers 30 km/s
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Third result : H 2 O masers along HII region border have proper motions away from star expansion of shell HII region with t HII = 500 AU/50 km/s = 50 yr !!! note that this is distance independent hyperyoung HII region
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Final scenario: G24 A1 is a massive toroid, rotating about a bipolar outflow and infalling towards an O star with very young expanding HII region a 20 M O star has been formed through accretion (now finished…?)
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Example of rotating disk:
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IRAS 20126+4104 Cesaroni et al. Hofner et al. Moscadelli et al. Keplerian rotation: M * =7 M O Moscadelli et al. (2005)
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Results of disk search Two types of objects found: Toroids M > 100 M O R ~ 10000 AU L > 10 5 L O (O stars) (dM/dt) star > 10 -3 M O /yr t rot ~ 10 5 yr t acc ~ M/(dM/dt) star ~ 10 4 yr t acc << t rot non-equilibrium, circum- cluster structures Disks M < 10 M O R ~ 1000 AU L ~ 10 4 L O (B stars) (dM/dt) star ~ 10 -4 M O /yr t rot ~ 10 4 yr t acc ~ M/(dM/dt) star ~ 10 5 yr t acc >> t rot equilibrium, circumstellar structures
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Are there disks in O stars? In L star ~ 10 4 L O (B stars) true disks found In L star > 10 5 L O (O stars) no true disk (only toroids) found - but distance is large (few kpc) Orion I (450 pc) does have disk, but luminosity is unclear (< 10 5 L O ???) Difficult to detect disks in O (proto)stars. Why? Observational bias or physical explanation?
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Observational bias?
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Assumptions: HPBW = R disk /4 FWHM line = V rot (R disk ) M disk M star same in all disks T B > 20 K obs. freq. = 230 GHz 5 hours ON-source spec. res. = 0.2 km/s S/N = 20 edge-on i = 35°
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Assumptions: HPBW = R disk /4 FWHM line = V rot (R disk ) M disk M star same in all disks T B > 20 K obs. freq. = 230 GHz 5 hours ON-source spec. res. = 0.2 km/s S/N = 20 no stars edge-on i = 35°
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Physical explanation?
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O-star disks “hidden” inside toroids O-star disk lifetime too short, i.e. less than rotation period: photo-evaporation by O star (Hollenbach et al. 1994) tidal destruction by stellar companions (Hollenbach et al. 2000) In both cases we assume M disk =M star /2 and disk surface density ~ R -1, i.e. M disk R disk :
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tidal destruction rotational period photo-evaporation Cesaroni, Galli, Lodato, Walmsley, Zhang (2007)
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Disks in O (proto)stars might be shorter lived, and/or more deeply embedded than those detected in B (proto)stars Photoionosation: inefficient disk destruction mechanism, for all spectral types (if M disk comparable to M star ) Tidal interaction with the stellar companions: more effective to destroy outer regions of disks in O stars than in B-stars
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Conclusions Disks found in B (proto)stars star formation by accretion as in low-mass stars No disk found yet (only massive, rotating toroids) in O (proto)stars –observational bias (confusion, distance, rarity,…) –disks hidden inside toroids and/or truncated by tidal interactions with stellar companions –disks do not exist; alternative formation scenarios for O stars needed: coalescence of lower mass stars, competitive accretion (see Bonnell, Bate et al.)
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Furuya et al. (2002) Beltran et al. (2004) Beltran et al. (2005)
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10 pc G9.62+0.19 NIR J+H+K
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2 pc
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0.5 pc G9.62+0.19 350 micron Hunter et al. (2000)
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Testi et al. Cesaroni et al. 3.6cm
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Furuya et al. (2002) Beltran et al. (2004) Beltran et al. (2005) 1200 AU
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Beltran et al. (2005); Hofner et al. (in prep.) NH 3 red-shiftedNH 3 blue-shiftedNH 3 bulk CH 3 CN(12-11)
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IRAS 20126+4104 Edris et al. (2005) Sridharan et al. (2005) disk NIR & OH masers
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