Papers
Topics
Authors
Recent
Search
2000 character limit reached

The physical and chemical structure of Sagittarius B2, I. Three-dimensional thermal dust and free-free continuum modeling on 100 au to 45 pc scales

Published 6 Feb 2016 in astro-ph.GA and astro-ph.SR | (1602.02274v1)

Abstract: We model the dust and free-free continuum emission in the high-mass star-forming region Sagittarius B2 in order to reconstruct the three-dimensional density and dust temperature distribution, as a crucial input to follow-up studies of the gas velocity field and molecular abundances. We employ the three-dimensional radiative transfer program RADMC-3D to calculate the dust temperature self-consistently, provided a given initial density distribution. This density distribution of the entire cloud complex is then recursively reconstructed based on available continuum maps, including both single-dish and high-resolution interferometric maps covering a wide frequency range (40 GHz - 4 THz). The model covers spatial scales from 45 pc down to 100 au, i.e. a spatial dynamic range of 105. We find that the density distribution of Sagittarius B2 can be reasonably well fitted by applying a superposition of spherical cores with Plummer-like density profiles. In order to reproduce the spectral energy distribution, we position Sgr B2(N) along the line of sight behind the plane containing Sgr B2(M). We find that the entire cloud complex comprises a total gas mass of 8.0 x 106 Msun within a diameter of 45 pc, corresponding to an averaged gas density of 170 Msun/pc3. We estimate stellar masses of 2400 Msun and 20700 Msun and luminosities of 1.8 x 106 Lsun and 1.2 x 107 Lsun for Sgr B2(N) and Sgr B2(M), respectively. We report H_2 column densities of 2.9 x 1024 cm-2 for Sgr B2(N) and 2.5 x 1024 cm-2 for Sgr B2(M) in a 40" beam. For Sgr B2(S), we derive a stellar mass of 1100 Msun, a luminosity of 6.6 x 105 Lsun and a H_2 column density of 2.2 x 1024 cm-2 in a 40" beam. We calculate a star formation efficiency of 5% for Sgr B2(N) and 50% for Sgr B2(M), indicating that most of the gas content in Sgr B2(M) has already been converted to stars or dispersed.

Summary

No one has generated a summary of this paper yet.

Paper to Video (Beta)

No one has generated a video about this paper yet.

Whiteboard

No one has generated a whiteboard explanation for this paper yet.

Open Problems

We haven't generated a list of open problems mentioned in this paper yet.

Continue Learning

We haven't generated follow-up questions for this paper yet.

Collections

Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.