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Page 1: The Red MSX Source Survey Massive Star Formation in the ... · The Red MSX Source Survey Massive Star Formation in the Milky Way Stuart Lumsden University of Leeds RMS Team: Melvin

The Red MSX Source Survey

Massive Star Formation in the Milky Way

Stuart Lumsden

University of Leeds

RMS Team:Melvin Hoare, Rene Oudmaijer, Heather Cooper, Ben Davies (Leeds) Joe Mottram (Exeter)James Urquhart (ATNF)Toby Moore (Liverpool JMU)Michael Burton (UNSW)

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Massive Young Stellar Objects

Luminous (>104 L), embedded IR source.

Compact, ionised “wind” (emission lines have v~100 km/s) – radio “weak”.

Often present:

Molecular outflow/ Maser emission

Well characterised MYSOs number in the tens

Not found systematically, most nearby, may not be representative

GL2591

Gemini JHK

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Evolutionary Outline

IRDCs? Hot Core MYSO UCHII

SED:

Ext. maps Sub-mm/FIR Mid-IR Mid/Near-IR

Masers:

Ice chemistry CH3OH H2O OH

Radio:

No radio Weak Radio Strong Radio

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Why are MYSOs Important?

Final mass of star may be set in this phase (evidence for ongoing accretion)

Outflow/momentum transfer to natal cloud may peak/terminate at this time

Allows us to test models of massive star formation (eg collapse + disk accretion versus competitive accretion) before all the significant evidence is destroyed by the emergent OB star(s)

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The Red MSX Source (RMS) SurveyMSX survey: 8, 12, 14 and 21µ m, 18″ resolution, |b|<5o

Colour-select massive from the MSX PSC and 2MASS

Delivers ~2000 candidates: http://www.ast.leeds.ac.uk/RMS • Massive YSOs + UCHII regions + PN + C stars + OH/IR stars

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Multi-wavelength Ground-based Follow-up Campaign

Radio continuum (2arcsec resn, 5GHz, ATCA & VLA):

~500 detected UCHII regions (Urquhart et al. 2007, 2009) powered by O7+ stars

Mid-IR (Glimpse, ground-based, Mottram et al 2007) give morphology (MYSO ~ point source)

Contours: 6 cm

Greyscale: 8 µ m

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Multi-wavelength Ground-based Follow-up Campaign

Kinematic Distances:

13CO at Mopra, JCMT, Onsala, PMO & GRS (Urquhart et al. 2007, 2008) – ambiguity within solar circle solved using HII method after sources (MYSOs + HIIs) grouped into complexes (not complete)

Near IR spectra gives final class + source properties

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Luminosities

MIPSGAL 70µ m (15’ across)

SED fitting (Robitaille et al 2007)

Far-IR fluxes (MIPSGAL and Hi-GAL corrected for non-linearities) are combined with the distances to yield the luminosities (Mottram, PhD thesis 2008)

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Final RMS Aims – Testing SF Models

Luminosity Function for massive YSOs =>

Massive star formation rate

IMF

Accretion rate history

Envelope dispersal history

Clustering and triggering

High spatial/spectral resolution studies as function of luminosity, age and location.

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Testing Star Formation Models

Hosokawa & Omukai (2008): B0- have

“puffed up” atmospheres, cooler, less UV

McKee & Tan (2003): Accretion rate history with time

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Testing Star Formation Models

Davies et al 2009

Simulated Star Formation:

Star Formation follows gas distribution Galaxy

Assume SF rate 3M yr-1

Accretion rate history from McKee & Tan (2003)

When on MS, compute radio emission (HII region)

Let it evolve for 1 Myr

Then select using RMS criteria (distance, IR, L, radio flux)

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Testing Star Formation Models

Davies et al 2009

Distribution with Galactocentric radius

Early results: galactic distribution and numbers well

reproduced already (Davies et al. 2009)

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Testing Star Formation Models

And Galactic longitude and latitude

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As is luminosity distribution (Davies et al 2009)

Luminosity Distribution

Luminosity distribution also correct shape – but observed data shows that objects not clearly defined as just HII or YSO helps fill the gap where there are no massive YSOs

Observed data of ~50% of sample with firm distances

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MYSO (CO bandhead emission) in HII region – star has Teff~36000K

UCHII region

HII/YSO example

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Summary

RMS survey has delivered ~500 MYSOs and a similar number of compact HII regions across the galaxy.

Allows systematic global studies of trends for the first time – MYSOs mostly appear as lower luminosity than UCHII regions, but some evidence for rare, young O8+ MYSOs as well.

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Source Identification

Sample definition complete. From distances: sample is Galaxy wide.

Mottram, PhD thesis 2008

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Galactic Distribution

Large scale clustering of MYSOs, UCHIIs and CO cores to establish group membership (GRS & SCUBA2)

Spatial correlation analysis to test global star formation models

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Emission Line Properties

◘ Carr (1990) observations of TTauri stars

* Ishii et al (2001) observation of HAeBes

X RMS, Clarke PhD thesis 2007