The shadow _of_the_flying_saucer_a_very_low_temperature_for_large_dust_grainsSérgio Sacani
Os astrónomos usaram o ALMA e os telescópios do IRAM para fazer a primeira medição direta da temperatura dos grãos de poeira grandes situados nas regiões periféricas de um disco de formação planetária que se encontra em torno de uma estrela jovem. Ao observar de forma inovadora um objeto cujo nome informal é Disco Voador, os astrónomos descobriram que os grãos de poeira são muito mais frios do que o esperado: -266º Celsius. Este resultado surpreendente sugere que os modelos teóricos destes discos precisam de ser revistos.
Uma equipa internacional liderada por Stephane Guilloteau do Laboratoire d´Astrophysique de Bordeaux, França, mediu a temperatura de enormes grãos de poeira que se encontram em torno da jovem estrela 2MASS J16281370-2431391 na região de formação estelar Rho Ophiuchi, a cerca de 400 anos-luz de distância da Terra.
Esta estrela encontra-se rodeada por um disco de gás e poeira — chamado disco protoplanetário, uma vez que se encontra na fase inicial da formação de um sistema planetário. Este disco é visto de perfil quando observado a partir da Terra e a sua aparência em imagens no visível levou a que se lhe desse o nome informal de Disco Voador.
Os astrónomos utilizaram o ALMA para observar o brilho emitido pelas moléculas de monóxido de carbono no disco da 2MASS J16281370-2431391. As imagens revelaram-se extremamente nítidas e descobriu-se algo estranho — em alguns casos o sinal recebido era negativo. Normalmente um sinal negativo é fisicamente impossível, mas neste caso existe uma explicação, que leva a uma conclusão surpreendente.
3d modeling of_gj1214b_atmosphere_formation_of_inhomogeneous_high_cloouds_and...Sérgio Sacani
Uma equipe de cientistas da Universidade de Washington e da Universidade de Toronto foram os primeiros a simular nuvens exóticas em 3D na atmosfera de um exoplaneta.
O objeto em questão, é o GJ 1214b, um exoplaneta chamado de mini-Netuno que foi descoberto, seis anos atrás pelos astrônomos no Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.
Também conhecido como Gliese 1214b, esse mundo tem cerca de 2.7 vezes o diâmetro da Terra e uma massa quase 7 vezes maior que a massa do nosso planeta. Ele está localizado a cerca de 52 anos-luz de distância na constelação de Ophiuchus.
O planeta orbita a estrela anã vermelha, GJ 1214, a cada 38 horas, a uma distância de 1.3 milhões de milhas.
De acordo com estudos prévios, o planeta tem uma atmosfera rica em água ou hidrogênio com extensas nuvens.
“Deve existir altas nuvens ou uma névoa orgânica na atmosfera – como nós observamos em Titã. Sua temperatura atmosférica excede o ponto de fusão da água”, disse o Dr. Benjamin Charnay, um dos membros da equipe da Universidade de Washington.
Millimetre-wave emission from an intermediatemass black hole candidate in the...Sérgio Sacani
It is widely accepted that black holes with masses greater
than a million solar masses (M⊙) lurk at the centres of massive
galaxies. The origins of such ‘supermassive’ black holes
(SMBHs) remain unknown1, although those of stellar-mass
black holes are well understood. One possible scenario is that
intermediate-mass black holes (IMBHs), which are formed
by the runaway coalescence of stars in young compact star
clusters2, merge at the centre of a galaxy to form a SMBH3.
Although many candidates for IMBHs have been proposed,
none is accepted as definitive. Recently, we discovered a
peculiar molecular cloud, CO–0.40–0.22, with an extremely
broad velocity width, near the centre of our Milky Way galaxy.
Based on the careful analysis of gas kinematics, we concluded
that a compact object with a mass of about 105M⊙ is lurking
in this cloud4. Here we report the detection of a point-like
continuum source as well as a compact gas clump near the
centre of CO–0.40–0.22. This point-like continuum source
(CO–0.40–0.22*) has a wide-band spectrum consistent with
1/500 of the Galactic SMBH (Sgr A*) in luminosity. Numerical
simulations around a point-like massive object reproduce the
kinematics of dense molecular gas well, which suggests that
CO–0.40–0.22* is one of the most promising candidates for
an intermediate-mass black hole.
Large scale mass_distribution_in_the_illustris_simulationSérgio Sacani
Observations at low redshifts thus far fail to account for all of the baryons expected in the
Universe according to cosmological constraints. A large fraction of the baryons presumably
resides in a thin and warm–hot medium between the galaxies, where they are difficult to observe
due to their low densities and high temperatures. Cosmological simulations of structure
formation can be used to verify this picture and provide quantitative predictions for the distribution
of mass in different large-scale structure components. Here we study the distribution
of baryons and dark matter at different epochs using data from the Illustris simulation. We
identify regions of different dark matter density with the primary constituents of large-scale
structure, allowing us to measure mass and volume of haloes, filaments and voids. At redshift
zero, we find that 49 per cent of the dark matter and 23 per cent of the baryons are within
haloes more massive than the resolution limit of 2 × 108 M⊙. The filaments of the cosmic
web host a further 45 per cent of the dark matter and 46 per cent of the baryons. The remaining
31 per cent of the baryons reside in voids. The majority of these baryons have been transported
there through active galactic nuclei feedback. We note that the feedback model of Illustris
is too strong for heavy haloes, therefore it is likely that we are overestimating this amount.
Categorizing the baryons according to their density and temperature, we find that 17.8 per cent
of them are in a condensed state, 21.6 per cent are present as cold, diffuse gas, and 53.9 per cent
are found in the state of a warm–hot intergalactic medium.
Detection of hydrogen sulfide above the clouds in Uranus’s atmosphereSérgio Sacani
Visible-to-near-infrared observations indicate that the cloud top of the main cloud deck on Uranus lies at a pressure level of
between 1.2 bar and 3 bar. However, its composition has never been unambiguously identified, although it is widely assumed
to be composed primarily of either ammonia or hydrogen sulfide (H2S) ice. Here, we present evidence of a clear detection of
gaseous H2S above this cloud deck in the wavelength region 1.57–1.59 μm with a mole fraction of 0.4–0.8 ppm at the cloud top.
Its detection constrains the deep bulk sulfur/nitrogen abundance to exceed unity (>4.4–5.0 times the solar value) in Uranus’s
bulk atmosphere, and places a lower limit on the mole fraction of H2S below the observed cloud of (1.0 2.5) × 10 5 − − . The detection
of gaseous H2S at these pressure levels adds to the weight of evidence that the principal constituent of 1.2–3-bar cloud is
likely to be H2S ice.
Hydrogen Column Density Variability in a Sample of Local Compton-Thin AGNSérgio Sacani
We present the analysis of multiepoch observations of a set of 12 variable, Compton-thin, local (z<0.1) active galactic nuclei (AGN) selected from the 100-month BAT catalog. We analyze all available X-ray data from Chandra, XMMNewton, and NuSTAR, adding up to a total of 53 individual observations. This corresponds to between 3 and 7 observations per source, probing variability timescales between a few days and ∼ 20 yr. All sources have at least one NuSTAR observation, ensuring high-energy coverage, which allows us to disentangle the line-of-sight and reflection components in the X-ray spectra. For each source, we model all available spectra simultaneously, using the physical torus models MYTorus, borus02, and UXCLUMPY. The simultaneous fitting, along with the high-energy coverage, allows us to place tight constraints on torus parameters such as the torus covering factor, inclination angle, and torus average column density. We also estimate the line-of-sight column density (NH) for each individual observation. Within the 12 sources, we detect clear line-of-sight NH variability in 5, non-variability in 5, and for 2 of them it is not possible to fully disentangle intrinsic-luminosity and NH variability. We observe large differences between the average values of line-ofsight NH (or NH of the obscurer) and the average NH of the torus (or NH of the reflector), for each source, by a factor between ∼ 2 to > 100. This behavior, which suggests a physical disconnect between the absorber and the reflector, is more extreme in sources that present NH variability. NH-variable AGN also tend to present larger obscuration and broader cloud distributions than their non-variable counterparts. We observe that large changes in obscuration only occur at long timescales, and use this to place tentative lower limits on torus cloud sizes.
The first X-ray look at SMSS J114447.77-430859.3: the most luminous quasar in...Sérgio Sacani
SMSS J114447.77-430859.3 (z = 0.83) has been identified in the SkyMapper Southern Survey as the most luminous quasar in
the last ∼ 9 Gyr . In this paper, we report on the eROSITA/Spectrum–Roentgen–Gamma (SRG) observations of the source from
the eROSITA All Sky Survey, along with presenting results from recent monitoring performed using Swift, XMM-Newton, and
NuSTAR. The source shows a clear variability by factors of ∼10 and ∼2.7 overtime-scales of a year and of a few days,respectively.
When fit with an absorbed power law plus high-energy cutoff, the X-ray spectra reveal a = 2.2 ± 0.2 and Ecut = 23+26
−5 keV
. Assuming Comptonization, we estimate a coronal optical depth and electron temperature of τ = 2.5 − 5.3 (5.2 − 8) and
kT = 8 − 18 (7.5 − 14) keV , respectively, for a slab (spherical) geometry. The broadband SED is successfully modelled by
assuming either a standard accretion disc illuminated by a central X-ray source, or a thin disc with a slim disc emissivity profile.
The former model results in a black hole mass estimate of the order of 1010 M , slightly higher than prior optical estimates;
meanwhile, the latter model suggests a lower mass. Both models suggest sub-Eddington accretion when assuming a spinning
black hole, and a compact (∼ 10 rg ) X-ray corona. The measured intrinsic column density and the Eddington ratio strongly
suggest the presence of an outflow driven by radiation pressure. This is also supported by variation of absorption by an order of
magnitude over the period of ∼ 900 d .
Observation of Io’s Resurfacing via Plume Deposition Using Ground-based Adapt...Sérgio Sacani
Since volcanic activity was first discovered on Io from Voyager images in 1979, changes
on Io’s surface have been monitored from both spacecraft and ground-based telescopes.
Here, we present the highest spatial resolution images of Io ever obtained from a groundbased telescope. These images, acquired by the SHARK-VIS instrument on the Large
Binocular Telescope, show evidence of a major resurfacing event on Io’s trailing hemisphere. When compared to the most recent spacecraft images, the SHARK-VIS images
show that a plume deposit from a powerful eruption at Pillan Patera has covered part
of the long-lived Pele plume deposit. Although this type of resurfacing event may be common on Io, few have been detected due to the rarity of spacecraft visits and the previously low spatial resolution available from Earth-based telescopes. The SHARK-VIS instrument ushers in a new era of high resolution imaging of Io’s surface using adaptive
optics at visible wavelengths.
Earliest Galaxies in the JADES Origins Field: Luminosity Function and Cosmic ...Sérgio Sacani
We characterize the earliest galaxy population in the JADES Origins Field (JOF), the deepest
imaging field observed with JWST. We make use of the ancillary Hubble optical images (5 filters
spanning 0.4−0.9µm) and novel JWST images with 14 filters spanning 0.8−5µm, including 7 mediumband filters, and reaching total exposure times of up to 46 hours per filter. We combine all our data
at > 2.3µm to construct an ultradeep image, reaching as deep as ≈ 31.4 AB mag in the stack and
30.3-31.0 AB mag (5σ, r = 0.1” circular aperture) in individual filters. We measure photometric
redshifts and use robust selection criteria to identify a sample of eight galaxy candidates at redshifts
z = 11.5 − 15. These objects show compact half-light radii of R1/2 ∼ 50 − 200pc, stellar masses of
M⋆ ∼ 107−108M⊙, and star-formation rates of SFR ∼ 0.1−1 M⊙ yr−1
. Our search finds no candidates
at 15 < z < 20, placing upper limits at these redshifts. We develop a forward modeling approach to
infer the properties of the evolving luminosity function without binning in redshift or luminosity that
marginalizes over the photometric redshift uncertainty of our candidate galaxies and incorporates the
impact of non-detections. We find a z = 12 luminosity function in good agreement with prior results,
and that the luminosity function normalization and UV luminosity density decline by a factor of ∼ 2.5
from z = 12 to z = 14. We discuss the possible implications of our results in the context of theoretical
models for evolution of the dark matter halo mass function.
THE IMPORTANCE OF MARTIAN ATMOSPHERE SAMPLE RETURN.Sérgio Sacani
The return of a sample of near-surface atmosphere from Mars would facilitate answers to several first-order science questions surrounding the formation and evolution of the planet. One of the important aspects of terrestrial planet formation in general is the role that primary atmospheres played in influencing the chemistry and structure of the planets and their antecedents. Studies of the martian atmosphere can be used to investigate the role of a primary atmosphere in its history. Atmosphere samples would also inform our understanding of the near-surface chemistry of the planet, and ultimately the prospects for life. High-precision isotopic analyses of constituent gases are needed to address these questions, requiring that the analyses are made on returned samples rather than in situ.
Multi-source connectivity as the driver of solar wind variability in the heli...Sérgio Sacani
The ambient solar wind that flls the heliosphere originates from multiple
sources in the solar corona and is highly structured. It is often described
as high-speed, relatively homogeneous, plasma streams from coronal
holes and slow-speed, highly variable, streams whose source regions are
under debate. A key goal of ESA/NASA’s Solar Orbiter mission is to identify
solar wind sources and understand what drives the complexity seen in the
heliosphere. By combining magnetic feld modelling and spectroscopic
techniques with high-resolution observations and measurements, we show
that the solar wind variability detected in situ by Solar Orbiter in March
2022 is driven by spatio-temporal changes in the magnetic connectivity to
multiple sources in the solar atmosphere. The magnetic feld footpoints
connected to the spacecraft moved from the boundaries of a coronal hole
to one active region (12961) and then across to another region (12957). This
is refected in the in situ measurements, which show the transition from fast
to highly Alfvénic then to slow solar wind that is disrupted by the arrival of
a coronal mass ejection. Our results describe solar wind variability at 0.5 au
but are applicable to near-Earth observatories.
Gliese 12 b: A Temperate Earth-sized Planet at 12 pc Ideal for Atmospheric Tr...Sérgio Sacani
Recent discoveries of Earth-sized planets transiting nearby M dwarfs have made it possible to characterize the
atmospheres of terrestrial planets via follow-up spectroscopic observations. However, the number of such planets
receiving low insolation is still small, limiting our ability to understand the diversity of the atmospheric
composition and climates of temperate terrestrial planets. We report the discovery of an Earth-sized planet
transiting the nearby (12 pc) inactive M3.0 dwarf Gliese 12 (TOI-6251) with an orbital period (Porb) of 12.76 days.
The planet, Gliese 12 b, was initially identified as a candidate with an ambiguous Porb from TESS data. We
confirmed the transit signal and Porb using ground-based photometry with MuSCAT2 and MuSCAT3, and
validated the planetary nature of the signal using high-resolution images from Gemini/NIRI and Keck/NIRC2 as
well as radial velocity (RV) measurements from the InfraRed Doppler instrument on the Subaru 8.2 m telescope
and from CARMENES on the CAHA 3.5 m telescope. X-ray observations with XMM-Newton showed the host
star is inactive, with an X-ray-to-bolometric luminosity ratio of log 5.7 L L X bol » - . Joint analysis of the light
curves and RV measurements revealed that Gliese 12 b has a radius of 0.96 ± 0.05 R⊕,a3σ mass upper limit of
3.9 M⊕, and an equilibrium temperature of 315 ± 6 K assuming zero albedo. The transmission spectroscopy metric
(TSM) value of Gliese 12 b is close to the TSM values of the TRAPPIST-1 planets, adding Gliese 12 b to the small
list of potentially terrestrial, temperate planets amenable to atmospheric characterization with JWST.
Gliese 12 b, a temperate Earth-sized planet at 12 parsecs discovered with TES...Sérgio Sacani
We report on the discovery of Gliese 12 b, the nearest transiting temperate, Earth-sized planet found to date. Gliese 12 is a
bright (V = 12.6 mag, K = 7.8 mag) metal-poor M4V star only 12.162 ± 0.005 pc away from the Solar system with one of the
lowest stellar activity levels known for M-dwarfs. A planet candidate was detected by TESS based on only 3 transits in sectors
42, 43, and 57, with an ambiguity in the orbital period due to observational gaps. We performed follow-up transit observations
with CHEOPS and ground-based photometry with MINERVA-Australis, SPECULOOS, and Purple Mountain Observatory,
as well as further TESS observations in sector 70. We statistically validate Gliese 12 b as a planet with an orbital period of
12.76144 ± 0.00006 d and a radius of 1.0 ± 0.1 R⊕, resulting in an equilibrium temperature of ∼315 K. Gliese 12 b has excellent
future prospects for precise mass measurement, which may inform how planetary internal structure is affected by the stellar
compositional environment. Gliese 12 b also represents one of the best targets to study whether Earth-like planets orbiting cool
stars can retain their atmospheres, a crucial step to advance our understanding of habitability on Earth and across the galaxy.
The importance of continents, oceans and plate tectonics for the evolution of...Sérgio Sacani
Within the uncertainties of involved astronomical and biological parameters, the Drake Equation
typically predicts that there should be many exoplanets in our galaxy hosting active, communicative
civilizations (ACCs). These optimistic calculations are however not supported by evidence, which is
often referred to as the Fermi Paradox. Here, we elaborate on this long-standing enigma by showing
the importance of planetary tectonic style for biological evolution. We summarize growing evidence
that a prolonged transition from Mesoproterozoic active single lid tectonics (1.6 to 1.0 Ga) to modern
plate tectonics occurred in the Neoproterozoic Era (1.0 to 0.541 Ga), which dramatically accelerated
emergence and evolution of complex species. We further suggest that both continents and oceans
are required for ACCs because early evolution of simple life must happen in water but late evolution
of advanced life capable of creating technology must happen on land. We resolve the Fermi Paradox
(1) by adding two additional terms to the Drake Equation: foc
(the fraction of habitable exoplanets
with significant continents and oceans) and fpt
(the fraction of habitable exoplanets with significant
continents and oceans that have had plate tectonics operating for at least 0.5 Ga); and (2) by
demonstrating that the product of foc
and fpt
is very small (< 0.00003–0.002). We propose that the lack
of evidence for ACCs reflects the scarcity of long-lived plate tectonics and/or continents and oceans on
exoplanets with primitive life.
A Giant Impact Origin for the First Subduction on EarthSérgio Sacani
Hadean zircons provide a potential record of Earth's earliest subduction 4.3 billion years ago. Itremains enigmatic how subduction could be initiated so soon after the presumably Moon‐forming giant impact(MGI). Earlier studies found an increase in Earth's core‐mantle boundary (CMB) temperature due to theaccumulation of the impactor's core, and our recent work shows Earth's lower mantle remains largely solid, withsome of the impactor's mantle potentially surviving as the large low‐shear velocity provinces (LLSVPs). Here,we show that a hot post‐impact CMB drives the initiation of strong mantle plumes that can induce subductioninitiation ∼200 Myr after the MGI. 2D and 3D thermomechanical computations show that a high CMBtemperature is the primary factor triggering early subduction, with enrichment of heat‐producing elements inLLSVPs as another potential factor. The models link the earliest subduction to the MGI with implications forunderstanding the diverse tectonic regimes of rocky planets.
Climate extremes likely to drive land mammal extinction during next supercont...Sérgio Sacani
Mammals have dominated Earth for approximately 55 Myr thanks to their
adaptations and resilience to warming and cooling during the Cenozoic. All
life will eventually perish in a runaway greenhouse once absorbed solar
radiation exceeds the emission of thermal radiation in several billions of
years. However, conditions rendering the Earth naturally inhospitable to
mammals may develop sooner because of long-term processes linked to
plate tectonics (short-term perturbations are not considered here). In
~250 Myr, all continents will converge to form Earth’s next supercontinent,
Pangea Ultima. A natural consequence of the creation and decay of Pangea
Ultima will be extremes in pCO2 due to changes in volcanic rifting and
outgassing. Here we show that increased pCO2, solar energy (F⨀;
approximately +2.5% W m−2 greater than today) and continentality (larger
range in temperatures away from the ocean) lead to increasing warming
hostile to mammalian life. We assess their impact on mammalian
physiological limits (dry bulb, wet bulb and Humidex heat stress indicators)
as well as a planetary habitability index. Given mammals’ continued survival,
predicted background pCO2 levels of 410–816 ppm combined with increased
F⨀ will probably lead to a climate tipping point and their mass extinction.
The results also highlight how global landmass configuration, pCO2 and F⨀
play a critical role in planetary habitability.
Constraints on Neutrino Natal Kicks from Black-Hole Binary VFTS 243Sérgio Sacani
The recently reported observation of VFTS 243 is the first example of a massive black-hole binary
system with negligible binary interaction following black-hole formation. The black-hole mass (≈10M⊙)
and near-circular orbit (e ≈ 0.02) of VFTS 243 suggest that the progenitor star experienced complete
collapse, with energy-momentum being lost predominantly through neutrinos. VFTS 243 enables us to
constrain the natal kick and neutrino-emission asymmetry during black-hole formation. At 68% confidence
level, the natal kick velocity (mass decrement) is ≲10 km=s (≲1.0M⊙), with a full probability distribution
that peaks when ≈0.3M⊙ were ejected, presumably in neutrinos, and the black hole experienced a natal
kick of 4 km=s. The neutrino-emission asymmetry is ≲4%, with best fit values of ∼0–0.2%. Such a small
neutrino natal kick accompanying black-hole formation is in agreement with theoretical predictions.
Detectability of Solar Panels as a TechnosignatureSérgio Sacani
In this work, we assess the potential detectability of solar panels made of silicon on an Earth-like
exoplanet as a potential technosignature. Silicon-based photovoltaic cells have high reflectance in the
UV-VIS and in the near-IR, within the wavelength range of a space-based flagship mission concept
like the Habitable Worlds Observatory (HWO). Assuming that only solar energy is used to provide
the 2022 human energy needs with a land cover of ∼ 2.4%, and projecting the future energy demand
assuming various growth-rate scenarios, we assess the detectability with an 8 m HWO-like telescope.
Assuming the most favorable viewing orientation, and focusing on the strong absorption edge in the
ultraviolet-to-visible (0.34 − 0.52 µm), we find that several 100s of hours of observation time is needed
to reach a SNR of 5 for an Earth-like planet around a Sun-like star at 10pc, even with a solar panel
coverage of ∼ 23% land coverage of a future Earth. We discuss the necessity of concepts like Kardeshev
Type I/II civilizations and Dyson spheres, which would aim to harness vast amounts of energy. Even
with much larger populations than today, the total energy use of human civilization would be orders of
magnitude below the threshold for causing direct thermal heating or reaching the scale of a Kardashev
Type I civilization. Any extraterrrestrial civilization that likewise achieves sustainable population
levels may also find a limit on its need to expand, which suggests that a galaxy-spanning civilization
as imagined in the Fermi paradox may not exist.
Jet reorientation in central galaxies of clusters and groups: insights from V...Sérgio Sacani
Recent observations of galaxy clusters and groups with misalignments between their central AGN jets
and X-ray cavities, or with multiple misaligned cavities, have raised concerns about the jet – bubble
connection in cooling cores, and the processes responsible for jet realignment. To investigate the
frequency and causes of such misalignments, we construct a sample of 16 cool core galaxy clusters and
groups. Using VLBA radio data we measure the parsec-scale position angle of the jets, and compare
it with the position angle of the X-ray cavities detected in Chandra data. Using the overall sample
and selected subsets, we consistently find that there is a 30% – 38% chance to find a misalignment
larger than ∆Ψ = 45◦ when observing a cluster/group with a detected jet and at least one cavity. We
determine that projection may account for an apparently large ∆Ψ only in a fraction of objects (∼35%),
and given that gas dynamical disturbances (as sloshing) are found in both aligned and misaligned
systems, we exclude environmental perturbation as the main driver of cavity – jet misalignment.
Moreover, we find that large misalignments (up to ∼ 90◦
) are favored over smaller ones (45◦ ≤ ∆Ψ ≤
70◦
), and that the change in jet direction can occur on timescales between one and a few tens of Myr.
We conclude that misalignments are more likely related to actual reorientation of the jet axis, and we
discuss several engine-based mechanisms that may cause these dramatic changes.
The solar dynamo begins near the surfaceSérgio Sacani
The magnetic dynamo cycle of the Sun features a distinct pattern: a propagating
region of sunspot emergence appears around 30° latitude and vanishes near the
equator every 11 years (ref. 1). Moreover, longitudinal flows called torsional oscillations
closely shadow sunspot migration, undoubtedly sharing a common cause2. Contrary
to theories suggesting deep origins of these phenomena, helioseismology pinpoints
low-latitude torsional oscillations to the outer 5–10% of the Sun, the near-surface
shear layer3,4. Within this zone, inwardly increasing differential rotation coupled with
a poloidal magnetic field strongly implicates the magneto-rotational instability5,6,
prominent in accretion-disk theory and observed in laboratory experiments7.
Together, these two facts prompt the general question: whether the solar dynamo is
possibly a near-surface instability. Here we report strong affirmative evidence in stark
contrast to traditional models8 focusing on the deeper tachocline. Simple analytic
estimates show that the near-surface magneto-rotational instability better explains
the spatiotemporal scales of the torsional oscillations and inferred subsurface
magnetic field amplitudes9. State-of-the-art numerical simulations corroborate these
estimates and reproduce hemispherical magnetic current helicity laws10. The dynamo
resulting from a well-understood near-surface phenomenon improves prospects
for accurate predictions of full magnetic cycles and space weather, affecting the
electromagnetic infrastructure of Earth.
Extensive Pollution of Uranus and Neptune’s Atmospheres by Upsweep of Icy Mat...Sérgio Sacani
In the Nice model of solar system formation, Uranus and Neptune undergo an orbital upheaval,
sweeping through a planetesimal disk. The region of the disk from which material is accreted by
the ice giants during this phase of their evolution has not previously been identified. We perform
direct N-body orbital simulations of the four giant planets to determine the amount and origin of solid
accretion during this orbital upheaval. We find that the ice giants undergo an extreme bombardment
event, with collision rates as much as ∼3 per hour assuming km-sized planetesimals, increasing the
total planet mass by up to ∼0.35%. In all cases, the initially outermost ice giant experiences the
largest total enhancement. We determine that for some plausible planetesimal properties, the resulting
atmospheric enrichment could potentially produce sufficient latent heat to alter the planetary cooling
timescale according to existing models. Our findings suggest that substantial accretion during this
phase of planetary evolution may have been sufficient to impact the atmospheric composition and
thermal evolution of the ice giants, motivating future work on the fate of deposited solid material.
Exomoons & Exorings with the Habitable Worlds Observatory I: On the Detection...Sérgio Sacani
The highest priority recommendation of the Astro2020 Decadal Survey for space-based astronomy
was the construction of an observatory capable of characterizing habitable worlds. In this paper series
we explore the detectability of and interference from exomoons and exorings serendipitously observed
with the proposed Habitable Worlds Observatory (HWO) as it seeks to characterize exoplanets, starting
in this manuscript with Earth-Moon analog mutual events. Unlike transits, which only occur in systems
viewed near edge-on, shadow (i.e., solar eclipse) and lunar eclipse mutual events occur in almost every
star-planet-moon system. The cadence of these events can vary widely from ∼yearly to multiple events
per day, as was the case in our younger Earth-Moon system. Leveraging previous space-based (EPOXI)
lightcurves of a Moon transit and performance predictions from the LUVOIR-B concept, we derive
the detectability of Moon analogs with HWO. We determine that Earth-Moon analogs are detectable
with observation of ∼2-20 mutual events for systems within 10 pc, and larger moons should remain
detectable out to 20 pc. We explore the extent to which exomoon mutual events can mimic planet
features and weather. We find that HWO wavelength coverage in the near-IR, specifically in the 1.4 µm
water band where large moons can outshine their host planet, will aid in differentiating exomoon signals
from exoplanet variability. Finally, we predict that exomoons formed through collision processes akin
to our Moon are more likely to be detected in younger systems, where shorter orbital periods and
favorable geometry enhance the probability and frequency of mutual events.
Emergent ribozyme behaviors in oxychlorine brines indicate a unique niche for...Sérgio Sacani
Mars is a particularly attractive candidate among known astronomical objects
to potentially host life. Results from space exploration missions have provided
insights into Martian geochemistry that indicate oxychlorine species, particularly perchlorate, are ubiquitous features of the Martian geochemical landscape. Perchlorate presents potential obstacles for known forms of life due to
its toxicity. However, it can also provide potential benefits, such as producing
brines by deliquescence, like those thought to exist on present-day Mars. Here
we show perchlorate brines support folding and catalysis of functional RNAs,
while inactivating representative protein enzymes. Additionally, we show
perchlorate and other oxychlorine species enable ribozyme functions,
including homeostasis-like regulatory behavior and ribozyme-catalyzed
chlorination of organic molecules. We suggest nucleic acids are uniquely wellsuited to hypersaline Martian environments. Furthermore, Martian near- or
subsurface oxychlorine brines, and brines found in potential lifeforms, could
provide a unique niche for biomolecular evolution.
Continuum emission from within the plunging region of black hole discsSérgio Sacani
The thermal continuum emission observed from accreting black holes across X-ray bands has the potential to be leveraged as a
powerful probe of the mass and spin of the central black hole. The vast majority of existing ‘continuum fitting’ models neglect
emission sourced at and within the innermost stable circular orbit (ISCO) of the black hole. Numerical simulations, however,
find non-zero emission sourced from these regions. In this work, we extend existing techniques by including the emission
sourced from within the plunging region, utilizing new analytical models that reproduce the properties of numerical accretion
simulations. We show that in general the neglected intra-ISCO emission produces a hot-and-small quasi-blackbody component,
but can also produce a weak power-law tail for more extreme parameter regions. A similar hot-and-small blackbody component
has been added in by hand in an ad hoc manner to previous analyses of X-ray binary spectra. We show that the X-ray spectrum
of MAXI J1820+070 in a soft-state outburst is extremely well described by a full Kerr black hole disc, while conventional
models that neglect intra-ISCO emission are unable to reproduce the data. We believe this represents the first robust detection of
intra-ISCO emission in the literature, and allows additional constraints to be placed on the MAXI J1820 + 070 black hole spin
which must be low a• < 0.5 to allow a detectable intra-ISCO region. Emission from within the ISCO is the dominant emission
component in the MAXI J1820 + 070 spectrum between 6 and 10 keV, highlighting the necessity of including this region. Our
continuum fitting model is made publicly available.
WASP-69b’s Escaping Envelope Is Confined to a Tail Extending at Least 7 RpSérgio Sacani
Studying the escaping atmospheres of highly irradiated exoplanets is critical for understanding the physical
mechanisms that shape the demographics of close-in planets. A number of planetary outflows have been observed
as excess H/He absorption during/after transit. Such an outflow has been observed for WASP-69b by multiple
groups that disagree on the geometry and velocity structure of the outflow. Here, we report the detection of this
planet’s outflow using Keck/NIRSPEC for the first time. We observed the outflow 1.28 hr after egress until the
target set, demonstrating the outflow extends at least 5.8 × 105 km or 7.5 Rp This detection is significantly longer
than previous observations, which report an outflow extending ∼2.2 planet radii just 1 yr prior. The outflow is
blueshifted by −23 km s−1 in the planetary rest frame. We estimate a current mass-loss rate of 1 M⊕ Gyr−1
. Our
observations are most consistent with an outflow that is strongly sculpted by ram pressure from the stellar wind.
However, potential variability in the outflow could be due to time-varying interactions with the stellar wind or
differences in instrumental precision.
X-rays from a Central “Exhaust Vent” of the Galactic Center ChimneySérgio Sacani
Using deep archival observations from the Chandra X-ray Observatory, we present an analysis of
linear X-ray-emitting features located within the southern portion of the Galactic center chimney,
and oriented orthogonal to the Galactic plane, centered at coordinates l = 0.08◦
, b = −1.42◦
. The
surface brightness and hardness ratio patterns are suggestive of a cylindrical morphology which may
have been produced by a plasma outflow channel extending from the Galactic center. Our fits of the
feature’s spectra favor a complex two-component model consisting of thermal and recombining plasma
components, possibly a sign of shock compression or heating of the interstellar medium by outflowing
material. Assuming a recombining plasma scenario, we further estimate the cooling timescale of this
plasma to be on the order of a few hundred to thousands of years, leading us to speculate that a
sequence of accretion events onto the Galactic Black Hole may be a plausible quasi-continuous energy
source to sustain the observed morphology
X-rays from a Central “Exhaust Vent” of the Galactic Center Chimney
The relation between_gas_and_dust_in_the_taurus_molecular_cloud
1. To appear in the Astrophysical Journal
Preprint typeset using L TEX style emulateapj v. 11/10/09
A
THE RELATION BETWEEN GAS AND DUST IN THE TAURUS MOLECULAR CLOUD
Jorge L. Pineda1 , Paul F. Goldsmith1 , Nicholas Chapman1 , Ronald L. Snell2 , Di Li1 , Laurent Cambr´sy3 , and
e
Chris Brunt4
1 Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, 4800 Oak Grove Drive, Pasadena, CA 91109-8099, USA
2 Department of Astronomy, LGRT 619, University of Massachusetts, 710 North Pleasant Street, Amherst, MA 01003, USA
3 Observatoire Astronomique de Strasbourg, 67000 Strasbourg, France
4 Astrophysics Group, School of Physics, University of Exeter, Stocker Road, Exeter, EX4 4QL, UK
To appear in the Astrophysical Journal
arXiv:1007.5060v1 [astro-ph.GA] 28 Jul 2010
ABSTRACT
We report a study of the relation between dust and gas over a 100 deg2 area in the Taurus molecular
cloud. We compare the H2 column density derived from dust extinction with the CO column density
derived from the 12 CO and 13 CO J = 1 → 0 lines. We derive the visual extinction from reddening
determined from 2MASS data. The comparison is done at an angular size of 200′′ , corresponding to
0.14 pc at a distance of 140 pc. We find that the relation between visual extinction AV and N (CO) is
linear between AV ≃ 3 and 10 mag in the region associated with the B213–L1495 filament. In other
regions the linear relation is flattened for AV 4 mag. We find that the presence of temperature
gradients in the molecular gas affects the determination of N (CO) by ∼30–70% with the largest
difference occurring at large column densities. Adding a correction for this effect and accounting
for the observed relation between the column density of CO and CO2 ices and AV , we find a linear
relationship between the column of carbon monoxide and dust for observed visual extinctions up to
the maximum value in our data ≃ 23 mag. We have used these data to study a sample of dense cores
in Taurus. Fitting an analytical column density profile to these cores we derive an average volume
density of about 1.4 × 104 cm−3 and a CO depletion age of about 4.2 × 105 years. At visual extinctions
smaller than ∼3 mag, we find that the CO fractional abundance is reduced by up to two orders of
magnitude. The data show a large scatter suggesting a range of physical conditions of the gas. We
estimate the H2 mass of Taurus to be about 1.5 × 104 M⊙ , independently derived from the AV and
N (CO) maps. We derive a CO integrated intensity to H2 conversion factor of about 2.1×1020 cm−2 (K
km s−1 )−1 , which applies even in the region where the [CO]/[H2 ] ratio is reduced by up to two orders of
magnitude. The distribution of column densities in our Taurus maps resembles a log–normal function
but shows tails at large and low column densities. The length scale at which the high–column density
tail starts to be noticeable is about 0.4 pc.
Subject headings: ISM: molecules — ISM: structure
1. INTRODUCTION able to trace large column densities. Goldsmith et al.
Interstellar dust and gas provide the primary tools for (2008) used a 100 square degree map of 12 CO and 13 CO
tracing the structure and determining the mass of ex- in the Taurus molecular cloud to derive the distribution
tended clouds as well as more compact, dense regions of N (CO) and N (H2 ). By binning the CO data by exci-
within which new stars form. The most fundamental tation temperature, they were able to estimate the CO
measure of the amount material in molecular clouds is the column densities in individual pixels where 12 CO but not
13
number of H2 molecules along the line of sight averaged CO was detected. The pixels where neither 12 CO or
13
over an area defined by the resolution of the observa- CO were detected were binned together to estimate the
tions, the H2 column density, N (H2 ). Unfortunately, H2 average column density in this portion of the cloud.
has no transitions that can be excited under the typical Extensive work has been done to assess the reliability
conditions of molecular clouds, and therefore it cannot of CO as a tracer of the column of H2 molecules (e.g.
be directly observed in such regions. We have to rely on Frerking et al. 1982; Langer et al. 1989). It has been
indirect methods to determine N (H2 ). Two of the most found that N (CO) is not linearly correlated with N (H2 ),
common methods are observations of CO emission and as the former quantity is sensitive to chemical effects such
dust extinction. as CO depletion at high volume densities (Kramer et al.
Carbon monoxide (CO) is the second most abundant 1999; Caselli et al. 1999; Tafalla et al. 2002) and the
molecular species (after H2 ) in the Universe. Observa- competition between CO formation and destruction at
low-column densities (e.g. van Dishoeck & Black 1988;
tions of 12 CO and 13 CO together with the assumption of
Visser et al. 2009). Moreover, temperature gradients are
local thermodynamic equilibrium (LTE) and moderate
13 likely present in molecular clouds (e.g. Evans et al. 2001)
CO optical depths allow us to determine N (CO) and, affecting the correction of N (CO) for optical depth ef-
assuming an [CO]/[H2 ] abundance ratio, we can obtain fects.
N (H2 ). This method is, however, limited by the sen- The H2 column density can be independently in-
sitivity of the 13 CO observations and therefore is only ferred by measuring the optical or near–infrared light
from background stars that has been extincted by the
Jorge.Pineda@jpl.nasa.gov
2. 2 Pineda, Goldsmith, Chapman, Snell, Li, Cambr´sy & Brunt
e
dust present in the molecular cloud (Lada et al. 1994; far-ultraviolet (FUV) photons. These effects can reduce
Cambr´sy 1999; Dobashi et al. 2005). This method is
e [CO]/[H2 ] by up to three orders of magnitude (e.g.
often regarded as one of the most reliable because it van Dishoeck & Black 1988; Liszt 2007; Visser et al.
does not depend strongly on the physical conditions of 2009). This column density regime has been studied
the dust. But this method is not without some uncer- in dozens of lines-of-sight using UV and optical ab-
tainty. Variations in the total to selective extinction and sorption (e.g. Federman et al. 1980; Sheffer et al. 2002;
dust–to–gas ratio, particularly in denser clouds like those Sonnentrucker et al. 2003; Burgh et al. 2007) as well
in Taurus, may introduce some uncertainty in the con- as in absorption toward mm-wave continuum sources
version of the infrared extinction to gas column density (Liszt & Lucas 1998). The statistical method presented
(Whittet et al. 2001). Dust emission has been also used by Goldsmith et al. (2008) allows the determination
to derive the column density of H2 (Langer et al. 1989). of CO column densities in several hundred thousand
It is, however, strongly dependent on the dust temper- positions in the periphery of the Taurus molecular cloud
ature along the line of sight, which is not always well with N (CO) ≃ 1014 − 1017 cm−3 . A comparison with
characterized and difficult to determine. Neither method the visual extinction will provide a coherent picture of
provides information about the kinematics of the gas. the relation between N (CO) and N (H2 ) from diffuse to
It is therefore of interest to compare column density dense gas in Taurus. These results can be compared
maps derived from 12 CO and 13 CO observations with with theoretical predictions that provide constraints in
dust extinction maps. This will allow us to character- physical parameters such as the strength of the FUV
ize the impact of chemistry and saturation effects in the radiation field, etc.
derivation of N (CO) and N (H2 ) while testing theoreti- Accounting for the various mechanisms affecting the
cal predictions of the physical processes that cause these [CO]/[H2 ] relative abundance allows the determination
effects. of the H2 column density that can be compared with
As mentioned before, CO is frozen onto dust grains in that derived from AV in the Taurus molecular cloud.
regions of relatively low temperature and larger volume It has also been suggested that the total molecular
densities (e.g. Kramer et al. 1999; Tafalla et al. 2002; mass can be determined using only the integrated in-
Bergin et al. 2002). In dense cores, the column densities tensity of the 12 CO J = 1 → 0 line together with the
of C17 O (Bergin et al. 2002) and C18 O (Kramer et al. empirically–derived CO-to-H2 conversion factor (XCO ≡
1999; Alves et al. 1999; Kainulainen et al. 2006) are ob- N (H2 )/ICO ). The XCO factor is thought to be depen-
served to be linearly correlated with AV up to ∼10 mag. dent on the physical conditions of the CO–emitting gas
For larger visual extinctions this relation is flattened with (Maloney & Black 1988) but it has been found to attain
the column density of these species being lower than that the canonical value for our Galaxy even in diffuse re-
expected for a constant abundance relative to H2 . These gions where the [CO]/][H2 ] ratio is strongly affected by
authors showed that the C17 O and C18 O emission is op- CO formation/destruction processes (Liszt 2007). The
tically thin even at visual extinctions larger than 10 mag large–scale maps of N (CO) and AV also allow us to assess
and therefore the flattening of the relation between their whether there is H2 gas that is not traced by CO. This
column density and AV is not due to optical depths ef- so-called “dark gas” is suggested to account for a sub-
fects but to depletion of CO onto dust grains. These stantial fraction of the total molecular gas in our Galaxy
observations suggest drops in the relative abundance of (Grenier et al. 2005).
C18 O averaged along the line-of-sight of up to a factor of Numerical simulations have shown that the proba-
∼3 for visual extinctions between 10 and 30 mag. A sim- bility density function (PDF) of volume densities in
ilar result has been obtained from direct determinations molecular clouds can be fitted by a log-normal dis-
of the column density of CO–ices based on absorption tribution (e.g. Ostriker et al. 2001; Nordlund & Padoan
studies toward embedded and field stars (Chiar et al. 1999; Li et al. 2004; Klessen 2000). The shape of
1995). At the center of dense cores, the [CO]/][H2 ] ratio the distribution is expected to be log-normal as mul-
is expected to be reduced by up to five orders of magni- tiplicative effects determine the volume density of
tude (Bergin & Langer 1997). This has been confirmed a molecular cloud (Passot & V´zquez-Semadeni 1998;
a
by the comparison between observations and radiative V´zquez-Semadeni & Garc´ 2001). A log-normal func-
a ıa
transfer calculations of dust continuum and C18 O emis- tion can also describe the distribution of column
sion in a sample of cores in Taurus (Caselli et al. 1999; densities in a molecular cloud (Ostriker et al. 2001;
Tafalla et al. 2002). The amount of depletion is not only V´zquez-Semadeni & Garc´ 2001). For some molecular
a ıa
dependent on the temperature and density of the gas, clouds the column density distribution can be well fitted
but is also dependent on the timescale. Thus, determin- by a log–normal (e.g. Wong et al. 2008; Goodman et al.
ing the amount of depletion in a large sample of cores 2009). A study by Kainulainen et al. (2009), however,
distributed in a large area is important because it al- showed that in a larger sample of molecular complexes
low us to determine the chemical age of the entire Tau- the column density distribution shows tails at low and
rus molecular cloud while establishing the existence of large column densities. The presence of tails at large col-
any systematic spatial variation that can be a result of a umn densities seems to be linked to active star–formation
large–scale dynamical process that lead to its formation. in clouds. The AV and CO maps can be used to deter-
At low column densities (AV 3 mag, mine the distribution of column densities at large scales
N (CO) 1017 cm−2 ) the relative abundance of CO while allowing us to study variations in its shape in re-
and its isotopes are affected by the relative rates gions with different star–formation activity within Tau-
of formation and destruction, carbon isotope ex- rus.
change and isotope selective photodissociation by In this paper, we compare the CO column den-
sity derived using the 12 CO and 13 CO data from
3. The relation between gas and dust in the Taurus Molecular Cloud 3
is σTint =0.53 K km s−1 for 12 CO and σTint =0.23 K km s−1
∗ ∗
13
for CO. The map mean signal-to-noise ratio is 9 for
12
CO and 7.5 for 13 CO. Note that these values differ
slightly from those presented by Goldsmith et al. (2008),
as the correction for error beam pick–up produces small
changes in the noise properties of the data.
2.1. CO Column Density in Mask 2
2.1.1. The Antenna Temperature
When we observe a given direction in the sky, the an-
tenna temperature we measure is proportional to the
convolution of the brightness of the sky with the nor-
malized power pattern of the antenna. Deconvolving
the measured set of antenna temperatures is relatively
difficult, computationally expensive, and in consequence
rarely done. The simplest approximation that is made
is that the observed antenna temperature is that coming
Figure 1. Mask regions defined in the Taurus Molecular Cloud. from a source of some arbitrary size, generally that of the
Mask 2 is shown in black, Mask 1 in dark gray, and Mask 0 in light main beam, or else a larger region. It is assumed that
gray. We also show the 156 stellar members of Taurus compiled by
Luhman et al. (2006) as white circles. the measured antenna temperature can be corrected for
the complex antenna response pattern and its coupling
Narayanan et al. 2008 (see also Goldsmith et al. 2008) to the (potentially nonuniform) source by an efficiency,
with a dust extinction map of the Taurus molecular characterizing the coupling to the source. This is often
cloud. The paper is organized as follows: In Section 2 taken to be ηmb , the coupling to an uniform source of
we describe the derivation of the CO column density in size which just fills the main lobe of the antenna pat-
pixels where both 12 CO and 13 CO were detected, where tern. This was the approach used by Goldsmith et al.
12
CO but not 13 CO was detected, as well as in the region (2008). In Appendix A we discuss an improved technique
where no line was detected in each individual pixel. In which corrects for the error pattern of the telescope in
Section 3 we make pixel–by–pixel comparisons between the Fourier space. This technique introduces a “corrected
the derived N (CO) and the visual extinction for the large main–beam temperature scale”, Tmb,c . We can write the
and low column density regimes. In Section 4.1 we com- main–beam corrected temperature as
pare the total mass of Taurus derived from N (CO) and
AV . We also study how good the 12 CO luminosity to- 1 1
gether with a CO-to-H2 conversion factor can determine Tmb,c = T0 − 1 − e−τ , (1)
eT0 /Tex −1 eT0 /Tbg −1
the total mass of a molecular cloud. We study the distri-
bution of column densities in Taurus in Section 4.2. We where T0 = hν/k, Tex is the excitation temperature of the
present a summary of our results in Section 5. transition, Tbg is the background radiation temperature,
and τ is the optical depth. This equation applies to a
2. THE N(H2 ) MAP DERIVED FROM 12 CO AND 13 CO
given frequency of the spectral line, or equivalently, to a
In the following we derive the column density of given velocity, and the optical depth is that appropriate
CO using the FCRAO 14–m 12 CO and 13 CO obser- for the frequency or velocity observed.
vations presented by Narayanan et al. 2008 (see also If we assume that the excitation temperature is inde-
Goldsmith et al. 2008). In this paper we use data cor- pendent of velocity (which is equivalent to an assumption
rected for error beam pick-up using the method pre- about the uniformity of the excitation along the line–of–
sented by Bensch et al. (2001). The correction proce- sight) and integrate over velocity we obtain
dure is described in Appendix A. The correction for er- T0 C(Tex )
ror beam pick–up improves the calibration by 25–30%. Tmb,c (v)dv = (1 − e−τ (v) )dv , (2)
We also improved the determination of N (CO) compared eT0 /Tex − 1
to that presented by Goldsmith et al. (2008) by includ- where we have included explicitly the dependence of the
ing an updated value of the spontaneous decay rate and corrected main–beam temperature and the optical depth
using an exact numerical rather than approximate an- on velocity. The function C(Tex ), which is equal to unity
alytical calculation of the partition function. The val- in the limit Tbg → 0, is given by
ues of the CO column density are about ∼20% larger
than those presented by Goldsmith et al. (2008). Follow- eT0 /Tex − 1
ing Goldsmith et al. (2008), we define Mask 2 as pixels C(Tex ) = 1− . (3)
eT0 /Tbg − 1
where both 12 CO and 13 CO are detected, Mask 1 as pix-
els where 12 CO is detected but 13 CO is not, and Mask 0
as pixels where neither 12 CO nor 13 CO are detected. We 2.1.2. The Optical Depth
consider a line to be detected in a pixel when its intensity, The optical depth is determined by the difference in the
integrated over the velocity range between 0–12 km s−1 , populations of the upper and lower levels of the transition
is at least 3.5 times larger than the rms noise over the observed. If we assume that the line–of–sight is charac-
same velocity interval. We show the mask regions in Fig- terized by upper and lower level column densities, NU
ure 1. The map mean rms noise over this velocity range and NL , respectively, the optical depth is given by
4. 4 Pineda, Goldsmith, Chapman, Snell, Li, Cambr´sy & Brunt
e
Figure 2. Correction factors for the relation between integrated
main–beam temperature and upper level column density for a
Gaussian velocity distribution of the optical depth. The dotted
(blue) curve shows the correction factor obtained using integrals of
functions of the optical depth as given by Equation 15. The solid
(red) curve shows the correction factor employing the peak values
of the functions, given by Equation 16. Figure 3. Parameters of Mask 1 binned by 12 CO excitation tem-
perature Tex . The bottom panel shows the derived H2 density (left-
hand scale, squares) and the number of pixels in each Tex bin (right-
hand scale, triangles). The most common Tex values are between
hν0 5 − 9 K. The middle panel shows the observed (left-hand scale,
τ= φ(ν) [NL BLU − NU BUL ] , (4)
c squares) and derived (right-hand scale, triangles) 12 CO/13 CO ra-
tio. The top panel shows the derived 12 CO column density as-
where ν0 is the frequency of the transition, φ(ν) is the suming a line width of 1 Km s−1 . The H2 density, 12 CO column
line profile function, and the B’s are the Einstein B- density and derived 12 CO/13 CO ratio increase monotonically as a
coefficients. The line profile function is a function of the function of 12 CO excitation temperature.
frequency and describes the relative number of molecules
at each frequency (determined by relative Doppler veloc- gives us
ity). It is normalized such that φ(ν)dν = 1. For a
Gaussian line profile, the line profile function at line cen- c2 AUL φ(ν)NU T0 /Tex
τ (ν) = e −1 . (9)
ter is given approximately by φ(ν0 ) = 1/δνFWHM , where 8πν0 2
δνFWHM is the full width at the half maximum of the line
profile. If we integrate both sides of this equation over a range
We have assumed that the excitation temperature is of frequencies encompassing the entire spectral line of
uniform along the line of sight. Thus, we can define the interest, we find
excitation temperature in terms of the upper and lower c2 AUL NU T0 /Tex
level column densities, and we can write τ (ν)dν = e −1 . (10)
8πν0 2
NU gU −T0 /Tex
= e , (5)
NL gL
2.1.3. Upper Level Column Density
where the g’s are the statistical weights of the two levels. It is generally more convenient to describe the optical
The relationship between the B coefficients, depth in terms of the velocity offset relative to that of
gU BUL = gL BLU , (6) the nominal line center. The incremental frequency and
velocity are related through dv = (c/ν0 )dν, and hence
lets us write τ (ν)dν = (c/ν0 ) τ (v)dv. Thus we obtain
hνo BUL φ(ν)NU T0 /Tex c3 AUL NU T0 /Tex
τ (ν) = e −1 . (7) τ (v)dv = e −1 . (11)
c 8πν0 3
Substituting the relationship between the A and B coef-
ficients, We can rewrite this as
3
8πhν0 1 c3 AUL NU 1
AUL = BUL 3
, (8) = . (12)
c eT0 /Tex −1 8πν0 3 τ (v)dv
5. The relation between gas and dust in the Taurus Molecular Cloud 5
Table 1
12 CO Excitation Temperature Bins in Mask 1 and Best Estimates of Their Characteristics
Tex 12 CO/13 CO Number n(H2 ) N (CO)/δv 12 CO/13 CO
(K) Observed of Pixels (cm−3 ) (1016 cm−2 /km s−1 ) Abundance Ratio
5.5....................... 21.21 118567 250 0.56 30
6.5....................... 17.29 218220 275 0.95 30
7.5....................... 14.04 252399 275 1.6 30
8.5....................... 12.43 223632 300 2.3 32
9.5....................... 11.76 142525 300 3.6 40
10.5...................... 11.44 68091 400 4.1 45
11.5...................... 11.20 24608 500 5.3 55
12.5...................... 11.09 6852 700 6.7 69
Substituting this into Equation (2), we can write an ex- where B0 is the rotational constant of 13 CO (B0 = 5.51×
pression for the upper level column density as 1010 s−1 ) and Z is the partition function which is given
2 by
8πkν0 τ (v)dv ∞
NU = Tmb,c (v)dv. −hB0 (J+1)
hc3 AUL C(Tex ) (1 − e−τ (v) )dv Z= (2J + 1)e KTex . (18)
(13) J=0
For the calculation of the 13 CO column densities (Sec-
tion 2.1.4) we use a value for the Einstein A-coefficient The partition function can be evaluated explicitly as a
sum, but Penzias (1975) pointed out that for tempera-
of AUL =6.33×10−8 s−1 (Goorvitch 1994).
tures T ≫ hB0 /K, the partition function can be approx-
In the limit of optically thin emission for which τ (v) imated by a definite integral, which has value kT /hB0 .
≪ 1 for all v, and neglecting the background term in This form for the partition function of a rigid rotor
Equation (3)1 , the expression in square brackets is unity
molecule is almost universally employed, but it does con-
and we regain the much simpler expression tribute a small error at the relatively low temperatures of
2 dark clouds. Specifically, the integral approximation al-
8πkν0 ways yields a value of Z which is smaller than the correct
NU (thin) = Tmb,c (v)dv . (14)
hc3 AUL value. Calculating Z explicitly shows that this quantity
We will, however, use the general form of NU given in is underestimated by a factor of ∼1.1 in the range be-
Equation (13) for the determination of the CO column tween 8 K to 10K. Note that to evaluate Equation (18)
density. we assume LTE (i.e. constant excitation temperature)
We note that the factor in square brackets in Equa- which might not hold for high–J transitions. The error
tion (13) involves the integrals of functions of the optical due to this approximation is, however, very small. For
depth over velocity, not just the functions themselves. example, for Tex =10 K, only 7% of the populated states
There is a difference, which is shown in Figure 2, where is at J = 3 or higher.
we plot the two functions We can calculate the column density of 13 CO from
Equation (17) determining the excitation temperature
τ (v)dv Tex and the 13 CO optical depth from 12 CO and 13 CO
CF (integral) = , (15) observations. To estimate Tex we assume that the 12 CO
(1 − e−τ (v) )dv
line is optically thick (τ ≫ 1) in Equation (1). This
and results in
τ0
CF (peak) = , (16)
1 − e−τ0 5.53
Tex = , (19)
5.53
as a function of the peak optical depth τ0 . There is a ln 1 + 12
Tmb,c +0.83
substantial difference at high optical depth, which re-
flects the fact that the line center has the highest optical 12
where Tmb,c is the peak corrected main-beam bright-
depth so that using this value rather than the integral ness temperature of 12 CO. The excitation temperature
tends to overestimate the correction factor. in Mask 2 ranges from 4 to 19 K with a mean value of
13 13 9.7 K and standard deviation of 1.2 K.
2.1.4. Total CO column densities derived from CO and
12
CO observations.
Also from Equation (1), the optical depth as a function
of velocity of the 13 CO J = 1 → 0 line is obtained from
In LTE, the column density of the upper level (J = 1) the main-beam brightness temperature using
is related to the total 13 CO column density by
13 −1
Z hB0 J(J+1) Tmb,c (v) −1
N13 CO = NU e KTex (17) τ 13 (v) = − ln 1 − e5.29/Tex − 1 − 0.16 ,
(2J + 1) 5.29
1 This usually does not result in a significant error since in LTE
(20)
even in dark clouds Tex is close to 10 K as compared to Tbg = 2.7 13
where Tmb,c is the peak corrected main-beam brightness
K. Since Tbg is significantly less than T0 , the background term is
far from the Rayleigh–Jeans limit further reducing its magnitude temperature of 13 CO. We use this expression in Equa-
relative to that of the first term. tion (15) to determine opacity correction factor. We
6. 6 Pineda, Goldsmith, Chapman, Snell, Li, Cambr´sy & Brunt
e
evaluate the integrals in Equation (15) numerically. The ties. The free parameters in the modeling are tempera-
correction factor ranges from 1 to ∼4 with a mean value ture (T ), density (n), CO column density per unit line
of 1.3 and standard deviation of 0.2. The 13 CO column width (N (CO)/δv), and the 12 CO/13 CO abundance ratio
density is transformed to 12 CO column density assuming (R). Since the excitation is determined by both density
a 12 CO/13 CO isotope ratio of 69 (Wilson 1999), which and the amount of trapping (N/δv), there is a family of
should apply for the well–shielded material in Mask 2. n − N (CO)/δv parameters that give the same excitation
temperature. The other information we have is the 13 CO
2.1.5. Correction for Temperature Gradients along the Line integrated intensity for the average spectrum in each bin.
of Sight Thus the choice of n, N (CO)/δv and R must reproduce
In the derivation of the CO column density and its the excitation temperature and the observed 12 CO/13 CO
opacity correction we made the assumption that the gas ratio. Solutions also must have an optical depth in the
12
is isothermal. But observations suggest the existence of CO J = 1 → 0 of at least 3, to be consistent with
core-to-edge temperature differences in molecular clouds the assumption that this isotopologue is optically thick.
(e.g. Evans et al. 2001) which can be found even in re- This is the same method used in Goldsmith et al. (2008),
gions of only moderate radiation field intensity. There- although this time we used the RADEX program and the
fore the presence of temperature gradients might affect updated cross-sections from LAMDA.
our opacity correction. In fact, at low excitation temperature the data can only
We used the radiative transfer code RATRAN be fit if the CO is strongly fractionated. At high excita-
(Hogerheijde & van der Tak 2000) to study the effects of tion temperature we believe that the CO is unlikely to be
temperature gradients on the determination of N (CO). fractionated, and thus, R must vary with excitation tem-
The modeling is described in the Appendix C. We found perature. We chose solutions for Mask 1 that produced
that using 12 CO to determine the excitation tempera- both a monotonically decreasing R with decreasing ex-
ture of the CO gas gives the correct temperature only citation temperature and a smoothly decreasing column
at low column densities while the temperature is over- density with decreasing excitation temperature. The so-
estimated for larger column densities. This produces an lutions are given in Table 1 and shown Figure 3. The
underestimate of the 13 CO opacity which in turn affects uncertainty resulting from the assumption of a fixed ki-
the opacity correction of N (CO). This results in an un- netic temperature and from choosing the best value for R
derestimation of N (CO). We derived a correction for is about a factor of 2 in N (CO) (Goldsmith et al. 2008).
this effect (Equation [C2]) which is applied to the data. To obtain N (CO) per unit line width for a given value
of the excitation temperature we have used a non-linear
2.2. CO Column Density in Mask 1 fit to the data, and obtained the fitted function:
The column density of CO in molecular clouds is com-
monly determined from observations of 12 CO and 13 CO N (CO) δv
−1
Tex
2.7
with the assumption of Local Thermodynamic Equilib- = 6.5 × 1013 . (21)
cm−2 km s−1 K
rium (LTE), as discussed in the previous section. The
lower limit of N (CO) that can be determined is there- We multiply by the observed FWHM line width to de-
fore set by the detection limit of the 13 CO J = 1 → 0 termine the total CO column density. The upper panel
line. For large maps, however, it is possible to determine in Figure 3 shows N (CO)/δv as a function of Tex .
N (CO) in regions where only 12 CO is detected in indi-
vidual pixels by using the statistical approach presented 2.3. CO Column Density in Mask 0
by Goldsmith et al. (2008). In the following we use this To determine the carbon monoxide column density in
approach to determine the column density of CO in Mask regions where neither 12 CO nor 13 CO were detected, we
1. average nearly 106 spectra to obtain a single 12 CO and
We compute the excitation temperature from the 12 CO 13
CO spectra. From the averaged spectra we obtain a
peak intensities for all positions in Mask 1 assuming that 12
CO/13 CO integrated intensity ratio of ≃17. We need
the emission is optically thick. The Mask 1 data is then a relatively low R to reproduce such a low observed value.
binned by excitation temperature (in 1 K bins), and the Values of R = 25 or larger cannot reproduce the observed
13
CO data for all positions within each bin averaged to- isotopic ratio and still produce 12 CO emission below the
gether. In all bins we get a very significant detection detection threshold. Choosing R = 20 and a gas kinetic
of 13 CO from the bin average. Thus, we have the exci- temperature of 15 K, we fit the observed ratio with n =
tation temperature and the observed ratio of integrated 100 cm−3 and N (CO) = 3×1015 cm−2 . This gives rise to
intensities (12 CO/13 CO) in each 1 K bin. Since positions a 12 CO intensity of 0.7 K, below the detection threshold,
in Mask 1 are distributed in the periphery of high ex- however much stronger than the Mask 0 average of only
tinction regions, it is reasonable to assume that the gas 0.18 K. Thus, much of Mask 0 must not contribute to
volume density in this region is modest, and thus LTE the CO emission. In fact, only 26% of the Mask 0 area
does not necessarily apply, as thermalization would imply can have the properties summarized above, producing
an unreasonably low gas temperature at the cloud edges. significant CO emission. Therefore, the average column
We therefore assume that 12 CO is sub-thermally excited density2 throughout Mask 0 is 7.8 × 1014 cm−2 .
and that the gas has a kinetic temperature of 15 K. We
use the RADEX program (van der Tak et al. 2007), us- 2 Note that the estimate of the CO column density in Mask 0
ing the LVG approximation, and the collision cross sec- by Goldsmith et al. (2008) did not include the ∼26% filling factor
tions from the Leiden Atomic and Molecular Database we derived here and in consequence overestimated the CO column
(LAMDA; Sch¨ier et al. 2005), to compute line intensi-
o density in this region.
7. The relation between gas and dust in the Taurus Molecular Cloud 7
23
CO Column Density (10 17 cm −2 )
0.003
24
Visual Extinction (mag)
0
Figure 4. Maps of the CO column density (upper panel) and visual extinction (lower panel) in the Taurus Molecular cloud. The gray-scale
in the N (CO) and AV maps is expressed as the square root of the CO column density and of the visual extinction, respectively. The angular
resolution of the data in the figure is 40′′ for N (CO) and 200′′ for AV .
8. 8 Pineda, Goldsmith, Chapman, Snell, Li, Cambr´sy & Brunt
e
Figure 5. Histogram of the 12 CO column density distributions
in the Mask 0, 1, and 2 regions mapped in Taurus. The Mask 0
is indicated by a vertical line at N (CO) = 3 × 1015 cm−2 which
represents the column density in the CO–emitting region (26% of
the area of Mask 0; see Section 2.3). Note that we have not yet
corrected N (CO) in Mask 2 for the effect of temperature gradients Figure 6. Comparison between the visual extinction derived
in the opacity correction. from 2MASS stellar colors and the 12 CO column density derived
from 13 CO and 12 CO observations in Taurus. The dark blue line
Another option is to model the average spectra of 12 CO represents the 12 CO column density derived from AV assuming
and 13 CO matching both the ratio and intensity. Since N (H2 )/AV = 9.4 × 1020 cm−2 mag−1 (Bohlin et al. 1978) and a
now, our goal is to produce CO emission with inten- [CO]/[H2 ] abundance ratio of 1.1 × 10−4 . The gray scale repre-
sity 0.18 K, both 12 CO and 13 CO will be optically thin. sents the number of pixels of a given value in the parameter space
and is logarithmic in the number of pixels. The red contours are
Therefore we need an R that is equal to the observed 2,10,100, and 1000 pixels. Each pixel has a size of 100′′ or 0.07 pc
ratio. For R = 18, a solution with n = 100 cm−3 , at a distance of 140 pc.
δv = 1 km s−1 , and N (CO) = 7.3×1014 cm−2 fits both
the 12 CO and 13 CO average spectra for Mask 0. Note visual extinction and N (CO) are linearly correlated up
that this is very similar to the average solution (with a to about AV ≃ 10 mag. For larger visual extinctions
slightly larger R) that assumes that ∼26% of the area N (CO) is largely uncorrelated with the value of AV . In
has column density 3×1015 cm−2 and the rest 0. Thus the range 3 < AV < 10 mag, for a given value of AV ,
for a density of 100 cm−3 , the average CO column den- the mean value of N (CO) is roughly that expected for
sity must be about 7.8×1014 cm−2 in either model. Of a [CO]/[H2 ] relative abundance of ∼10−4 which is ex-
course, if we picked a different density we would get a pected for shielded regions (Solomon & Klemperer 1972;
slightly different column density. As mentioned above, Herbst & Klemperer 1973). Some pixels, however, have
the uncertainty is N (CO) is about a factor of 2. CO column densities that suggest a relative abundance
Note that the effective area of CO emission is uniformly that is reduced by up to a factor of ∼3. In the plot
spread over Mask 0. We subdivided the 12 CO data cube we show lines defining regions containing pixels with
in the Mask 0 region in an uniform grid with each bin AV > 10 mag and with 3 < AV < 10 mag and N (CO) >
containing about 104 pixels. After averaging the spectra 9 × 1017 cm−2 . In Figure 7 we show the spatial distribu-
in each bin we find significant 12 CO emission in 95% of tion of these pixels in N (CO) maps of the B213-L1457,
them. Heiles’s cloud 2, and B18-L1536 regions. White con-
3. COMPARISON BETWEEN AV AND N (12 CO) tours correspond to the pixels with AV > 10 mag and
black contours to pixels with 3 < AV < 10 mag and
In order to test our estimate of N (CO) and assess N (CO) > 9 × 1017 cm−2 . Regions with AV > 10 mag
whether it is a good tracer of N (H2 ), we compare Mask 1 are compact and they likely correspond to the center of
and 2 in our CO column density map of Taurus with a dense cores. The largest values of N (CO), however, are
dust extinction map derived from 2MASS stellar colors. not always spatially correlated with such regions. We no-
Maps of these quantities are shown in Figure 4. We also tice that large N (CO) in the AV = 3 − 10 mag range are
show in Figure 5 a histogram of the 12 CO column den- mostly located in the B213–L1457 filament. We study
sity distributions in the Mask 0, 1, and 2 regions mapped the relation between AV and N (CO) in this filament by
in Taurus. The derivation of the dust extinction map is applying a mask to isolate this region (see marked re-
described in Appendix B. The resolution of the map is gion in Figure 7). We show the relation between AV
200′′ (0.14 pc at a distance of 140 pc) with a pixel spacing and N (CO) in the B213–L1457 filament in the left hand
of 100′′ . For the comparison, we have convolved and re- panel of Figure 8. We also show this relation for the
gridded the CO column density map in order to match entire Taurus molecular cloud excluding this filament in
this resolution and pixel spacing. the right hand panel. Visual extinction and CO column
density are linearly correlated in the B213–L1457 fila-
3.1. Large N (12 CO) Column Densities ment with the exception of a few pixels that are located
We show in Figure 6 a pixel-by-pixel comparison be- in dense cores (Cores 3, 6 and 7 in Table 2). Without
tween visual extinction and 12 CO column density. The the filament the N (CO)/AV relation is linear only up to
9. The relation between gas and dust in the Taurus Molecular Cloud 9
∼4 magnitudes of extinction. In Section 3.1.1 we will
see that the deviation from a linear N (CO)/AV relation
is mostly due to depletion of CO molecules onto dust
grains. Depletion starts to be noticeable for AV ≥ 4 mag.
Therefore, pixels on the B213–L1457 filament appear to
show no signatures of depletion. This can be due either
to the filament being chemically young in contrast with
the rest of Taurus, or to the volume densities being low
enough that desorption processes dominate over those of
adsorption. If the latter case applies, and assuming a
volume density of n(H2 ) = 103 cm−3 (low enough to not
show significant CO depletion but still larger than the
critical density of the 13 CO J = 1 → 0 line), this fila-
ment would need to be extended along the line-of-sight
by 0.9–3 pc for 3 < AV < 10 mag. This length is much
larger than the projected thickness of the B213–L1495 fil-
ament of ∼0.2 pc but comparable to its length of ∼7 pc.
We will study the nature of this filament in a separate
paper.
Considering only regions with AV < 10 mag and
N (CO) > 1017 cm−2 (see Section 3.2) we fit a straight
line to the data in Figure 6 to derive the [CO]/[H2 ]
relative abundance in Mask 2. A least squares fit re-
sults in N (CO)/cm−2 = (1.01 ± 0.008) × 1017 AV /mag.
Assuming that all hydrogen is in molecular form
we can write the ratio between H2 column density
and color excess observed by Bohlin et al. (1978) as
N (H2 )/EB−V =2.9×1021 cm−2 mag−1 . We combine this
relation with the ratio of total to selective extinction
RV = AV /EB−V ≃ 3.1 (e.g. Whittet 2003) to ob-
tain N (H2 )/AV = 9.4 × 1020 22cm−2 mag−1 . Combin-
ing the N (H2 )/AV relation with our fit to the data,
we obtain a [CO]/[H2 ] relative abundance of 1.1×10−4.
Note that, as discussed in Appendix B, grain growth
would increase the value of RV up to ∼4.5 in dense re-
gions (Whittet et al. 2001). Due to this effect, we esti-
mate that the derived AV would increase up to 20% for
AV ≤10 mag. This would reduce the N (H2 )/AV con-
version but also increase the AV /N (CO) ratio. Thus the
derived [CO]/[H2 ] abundance is not significantly affected.
3.1.1. CO depletion
The flattening of the AV –N (CO) relation for AV >
10 mag could be due to CO depletion onto dust grains.
This is supported by observations of the pre-stellar core
B68 by Bergin et al. (2002) which show a linear increase
in the optically thin C18 O and C17 O intensity as a func-
tion of AV up to ∼7 mag, after which the there is a
turnover in the intensity of these molecules. This is simi-
lar to what we see in Figure 6. Note, however, AV alone is
not the sole parameter determining CO freeze-out, since
this process also depends on density and timescale (e.g.
Bergin & Langer 1997).
Following Whittet et al. (2010), we test the possibility
Figure 7. N (CO) maps of the B213–L1495 (top), Heiles’s cloud that effects of CO depletion are present in our observa-
2 (middle), and B18–L1536 (bottom) regions. The white contours tions of the Taurus molecular cloud by accounting for
denote regions with AV > 10 mag, while the black contours denote
regions with AV < 10 mag and N (CO) > 9 × 1017 cm−2 (see the column of CO observed to be in the form of ice on
Figure 6). The blue contour outlines approximately the B213– the dust grains. Whittet et al. (2007) measured the col-
L1457 filament. umn density of CO and CO2 ices3 toward a sample of
stars located behind the Taurus molecular cloud. They
3 It is predicted that oxidation reactions involving the CO
molecules depleted from the gas–phase can produce substantial
amounts of CO2 in the surface of dust grains (Tielens & Hagen
10. 10 Pineda, Goldsmith, Chapman, Snell, Li, Cambr´sy & Brunt
e
Figure 8. Pixel–by–pixel comparison between AV and N (CO) in the B213–L1457 filament (left) and the entire Taurus molecular cloud
without this filament (right).
grains is given by
N (CO)total = N (CO)ice + N (CO2 )ice .
ice (24)
Thus, for a given AV the total CO column density is
given by
N (CO)total = N (CO)gas−phase + N (CO)total .
ice (25)
We can combine our determination of the column den-
sity of gas-phase CO with that of CO ices to plot the
total N (CO) as a function of AV . The result is shown
in Figure 9. The visual extinction and N (CO)total are
linearly correlated over the entire range covered by our
data, extending up to AV = 23 mag. This result confirms
that depletion is the origin of the deficit of gas-phase CO
seen in Figure 6.
In Figure 10 we show the ratio of N (CO)total to
N (CO)gas−phase as a function of AV , for AV greater than
Figure 9. The same as Figure 6 but including the estimated 10. The drop in the relative abundance of gas-phase CO
column density of CO and CO2 ices. For comparison we show from our observations is at most a factor of ∼2. This is in
the relation between visual extinction and N (CO) derived from
observations of rare isotopic species by Frerking et al. (1982) (see agreement with previous determinations of the depletion
Appendix C) which also include the contribution for CO and CO2 along the line of sight in molecular clouds (Kramer et al.
ices. 1999; Chiar et al. 1995).
find that the column densities are related to the visual
extinction as 3.1.2. CO Depletion Age
In this Section we estimate the CO depletion age (i.e.
N (CO)ice the time needed for CO molecules to deplete onto dust
= 0.4(AV − 6.7), AV > 6.7 mag, (22)
1017 [cm−2 ] grains to the observed levels) in dense regions in the Tau-
and rus Molecular Cloud. We selected a sample of 13 cores
that have peak visual extinction larger than 10 mag and
N (CO2 )ice that AV at the edges drops below ∼0.9 mag (3 times the
= 0.252(AV − 4.0), AV > 4.0 mag. (23)
1017 [cm−2 ] uncertainty in the determination of AV ). The cores are
located in the L1495 and B18–L1536 regions (Figure 7).
We assume that the total column of CO frozen onto dust Unfortunately, we were not able to identify individual
1982; Ruffle & Herbst 2001; Roser et al. 2001). Since the timescale
cores in Heiles’s Cloud 2 due to blending.
of these his reactions are short compared with the cloud’s lifetime, We first determine the H2 volume density structure of
we need to include CO2 in order to account for the amount of CO our selected cores. Dapp & Basu (2009) proposed using
frozen into dust grains along the line–of–sight. the King (1962) density profile,
11. The relation between gas and dust in the Taurus Molecular Cloud 11
Figure 10. Ratio of N (CO)total to N (CO)gas−phase plotted as
a function of AV for the high extinction portion of the Taurus
molecular cloud. The line represents our fit to the data.
nc a2 /(r2 + a2 ) r≤R
n(r) = (26)
0 r > R,
which is characterized by the central volume density nc ,
a truncation radius R, and by a central region of size a
with approximately constant density.
The column density N (x) at an offset from the core
center x can be derived by integrating the volume density
along a line of sight through the sphere. Defining Nc ≡
2anc arctan(c) and c = R/a, the column density can be
written
Nc
N (x) =
1 + (x/a)2
c2 − (x/a)2
× arctan( )/ arctan(c) . (27)
1 + (x/a)2
This column density profile can be fitted to the data.
The three parameters to fit are (1) the outer radius R,
(2) the central column density Nc (which in our case is
AV,c ), and (3) the size of the uniform density region a.
We obtain a column density profile for each core by
fitting an elliptical Gaussian to the data to obtain its
central coordinates, position angle, and major and mi-
nor axes. With this information we average the data in
concentric elliptical bins. Typical column density pro-
files and fits to the data are shown in Figure 11. We
give the derived parameters of the 13 cores we have
analyzed in Table 2. We convert the visual extinction
at the core center AV,c to H2 column density assuming
N (H2 )/AV = 9.4 × 1020 cm−2 mag−1 . We use then the
definition of column density at the core center (see above)
to determine the central volume density nc (H2 ) from the Figure 11. Typical radial distributions of the visual extinction
fitted parameters. in the selected sample of cores. The solid lines represent the cor-
With the H2 volume density structure, we can derive responding fit.
the CO depletion age for each core. The time needed for
12. 12 Pineda, Goldsmith, Chapman, Snell, Li, Cambr´sy & Brunt
e
Table 2
Core Parameters
Core ID α(J2000) δ(J2000) AV,c a Radius nc (H2 ) Mass Depletion Age
[mag] [pc] [pc] [104 cm−3 ] [M⊙ ] [105 years]
1 04:13:51.63 28:13:18.6 22.4±0.5 0.10±0.004 2.01±0.30 2.2±0.11 307±102 6.3±0.3
2 04:17:13.52 28:20:03.8 10.7±0.3 0.19±0.021 0.54±0.12 0.7±0.09 56±43 3.4±1.5
3 04:18:05.13 27:34:01.6 12.3±1.2 0.16±0.054 0.32±0.18 1.0±0.40 29±63 1.3±3.1
4 04:18:27.84 28:27:16.3 24.2±0.4 0.13±0.005 1.27±0.08 1.9±0.07 258±52 3.8±0.2
5 04:18:45.66 25:18:0.4 9.4±0.2 0.09±0.005 2.00±0.93 1.1±0.07 110±81 10.9±0.8
6 04:19:14.99 27:14:36.4 14.3±0.6 0.12±0.010 0.89±0.15 1.3±0.12 93±47 3.1±0.6
7 04:21:08.46 27:02:03.2 15.2±0.3 0.08±0.003 1.12±0.08 1.9±0.07 90±19 2.9±0.2
8 04:23:33.84 25:03:01.6 14.4±0.3 0.11±0.004 0.93±0.07 1.4±0.06 94±23 5.1±0.3
9 04:26:39.29 24:37:07.9 15.6±0.5 0.09±0.006 1.48±0.23 1.7±0.12 143±58 2.3±0.3
10 04:29:20.71 24:32:35.6 17.2±0.4 0.13±0.006 2.48±0.39 1.3±0.07 371±127 4.5±0.3
11 04:32:09.32 24:28:39.0 16.0±0.5 0.09±0.006 3.50±2.41 1.7±0.13 347±347 3.2±0.4
12 04:33:16.62 22:42:59.6 12.2±0.5 0.08±0.007 1.66±0.64 1.5±0.14 110±82 6.3±0.7
13 04:35:34.29 24:06:18.2 12.5±0.3 0.11±0.006 1.64±0.35 1.2±0.07 145±65 2.0±0.4
CO molecules to deplete to a specified degree onto dust
grains is given by (e.g. Bergin & Tafalla 2007),
−1
5 × 109 n(H2 )
tdepletion = ln(n0 /ngas ), (28)
yr cm−3
where n0 is the total gas–phase density of CO before
depletion started and ngas the gas-phase CO density at
time tdepletion. Here we assumed a sticking coefficient4
of unity (Bisschop et al. 2006) and that at the H2 vol-
ume densities of interest adsorption mechanisms domi-
nate over those of desorption (we therefore assume that
the desorption rate is zero).
To estimate n0 /ngas we assume that CO depletion oc-
curs only in the flat density region of a core, as for larger
radii the volume density drops rapidly. Then the total
column density of CO (gas–phase+ices) in this region is
given by N (CO)flat ≃ 2anc (1.1 × 10−4 ). The gas-phase
CO column density in the flat density region of a core
is given by Ngas−phase (CO) = N (CO)flat − N (CO)total ,
flat
ice
where N (CO)total can be derived from Equation (25).
ice
Assuming that the decrease in the [CO]/[H2 ] relative
abundance in the flat region is fast and stays constant
toward the center of the core (models from Tafalla et al.
(2002) suggest an exponential decrease), then n0 /ngas ≃
N (CO)flat /Ngas−phase (CO). The derived CO depletion
flat
ages are listed in Table 2. Note that the fitted cores
might not be fully resolved at the resolution of our AV
map (200′′ or 0.14 pc at a distance of 140 pc). Although
n0 /ngas is not very sensitive to resolution, due to mass
conservation, we might be underestimating the density
at the core center. Therefore, our estimates of the CO
depletion age might be considered as upper limits.
In Figure 12 we show the central density and the cor-
responding depletion age of the fitted cores as a function
of AV . The central volume density is well correlated
with AV but varies only over a small range: its mean
value and standard deviation are (1.4 ± 0.4)×104 cm−3 .
Still, the moderate increase of n(H2 ) with AV com-
pensates for the increase of N (CO)total /N (CO)gas−phase
with AV to produce an almost constant depletion age.
Figure 12. (upper panel) The central H2 volume density as a
The mean value and standard deviation of tdepletion are function of the peak AV for a sample of 13 cores in the Taurus
molecular cloud. The line represent a fit to the data. (lower panel)
4 The sticking coefficient is defined as how often a species will
CO depletion age as a function of AV for the sample of cores.
remain on the grain upon impact (Bergin & Tafalla 2007).
13. The relation between gas and dust in the Taurus Molecular Cloud 13
(4.2 ± 2.4) × 105 years. This suggests that dense cores at- Sheffer et al. (2008) is much smaller than that shown in
tained their current central densities at a similar moment Figure 13. This indicates that we are tracing a wider
in the history of the Taurus molecular cloud. range of physical conditions of the gas. The excitation
temperature of the gas observed by Sheffer et al. (2008)
3.2. Low N (12 CO) column densities does not show a large variation from Tex =5 K while we
In the following we compare the lowest values of the observe values between 4 and 15 K.
CO column density in our Taurus survey with the visual In Figure 13 we see that some regions can have large
extinction derived from 2MASS stellar colors. In Fig- [12 CO]/[H2 ] abundance ratios but still have very small
ure 13 we show a comparison between N (CO) and AV column densities (AV = 0.1 − 0.5 mag). This can be
for values lower than 5 magnitudes of visual extinction. understood in terms of a medium which is made of an
The figure includes CO column densities for pixels lo- ensemble of spatially unresolved dense clumps embedded
cated in Mask 1 and 2. We do not include pixels in Mask in a low density interclump medium (Bensch 2006). In
0 because its single value does not trace variations with this scenario, the contribution to the total column den-
AV . Instead, we include a horizontal line indicating the sity from dense clumps dominates over that from the
derived average CO column density in this Mask region. tenuous inter–clump medium. Therefore the total col-
We show a straight line (blue) that indicates N (CO) ex- umn density is proportional to the number of clumps
along the line–of–sight. A low number of clumps along a
pected from a abundance ratio [12 CO]/[H2 ]=1.1×10−4 line–of–sight would give low column densities while in the
(Section 3.1). The points indicate the average AV in a interior of these dense clumps CO is well shielded against
N (CO) bin. We present a fit to this relation in Figure 14. FUV photons and therefore it can reach the asymptotic
The data are better described by a varying [12 CO]/[H2 ] value of the [CO]/[H2 ] ratio characteristic of dark clouds.
abundance ratio than a fixed one. This might be caused
by photodissociation and fractionation of CO which can 4. DISCUSSION
produce strong variations in the CO abundances between
UV-exposed and shielded regions (van Dishoeck & Black 4.1. The mass of the Taurus Molecular Cloud
1988; Visser et al. 2009). To test this possibility we in- In this section we estimate the mass of the Taurus
clude in the figure several models of these effects pro- Molecular Cloud using the N (CO) and AV maps. The
vided by Ruud Visser (see Visser et al. 2009 for details). masses derived for Mask 0, 1, and 2 are listed in Table 3.
They show the relation between AV and N (H2 ) for dif- To derive the H2 mass from N (CO) we need to apply an
ferent values of the FUV radiation field starting from appropriate [CO]/[H2 ] relative abundance for each mask.
χ = 1.0 to 0.1 (in units of the mean interstellar radia- The simplest case is Mask 2 where we used the asymp-
tion field derived by Draine 1978). All models have a totic 12 CO abundance of 1.1×10−4 (see Section 3.1). We
kinetic temperature of 15 K and a total H volume den- corrected for saturation including temperature gradients
sity of 800 cm−3 which corresponds to n(H2 ) ≃ 395 cm−3 and for depletion in the mass calculation from N (CO).
assuming n(H i)= 10 cm−3 . (This value of n(H2 ) is close These corrections amount to ∼319 M⊙ (4 M⊙ from the
to the average in Mask 1 of 375 cm−3 .) The observed re- saturation correction and 315 M⊙ from the addition of
lation between AV and N (CO) cannot be reproduced by the column density of CO–ices). For Mask 1 and 0, we
a model with a single value of χ. This suggests that the use the fit to the relation between N (H2 ) and N (CO)
gas have a range of physical conditions. Considering the shown in Figure 14. As we can see in Table 3, the masses
average value of AV within each bin covering a range in derived from AV and N (CO) are very similar. This con-
N (CO) of 0.25 dex, we see that for an increasing value firms that N (CO) is a good tracer of the bulk of the
of the visual extinction, the FUV radiation field is more molecular gas mass if variations of the [CO]/[H2 ] abun-
and more attenuated so that we have a value of N (CO) dance ratio are considered.
that is predicted by a model with reduced χ. Most of the mass derived from AV in Taurus is in Mask
We also include in Figure 13 the fit to the observa- 2 (∼49%). But a significant fraction of the total mass lies
tions from Sheffer et al. (2008) toward diffuse molecular in Mask 1 (∼28%) and Mask 0 (∼23%). This implies that
Galactic lines–of–sight for log(N (H2 )) ≥ 20.4. The fit mass estimates that only consider regions where 13 CO is
seems to agree with the portion our data points that detected underestimate the total mass of the molecular
agree fairly well with the model having χ = 1.0. Since gas by a factor of ∼2.
Sheffer et al. (2008) observed diffuse lines-of-sight, this We also estimate the masses of high–column density
suggests that a large fraction of the material in the Tau- regions considered by Goldsmith et al. (2008) that were
rus molecular cloud is shielded against the effect of the previously defined by Onishi et al. (1996). In Table 4 we
FUV illumination. This is supported by infrared obser- list the masses derived from the visual extinction as well
vations in Taurus by Flagey et al. (2009) that suggest as from N (CO). Again, both methods give very similar
that the strength of the FUV radiation field is between masses. These regions together represent 43% of the total
χ = 0.3 and 0.8. mass in our map of Taurus, 32% of the area, and 46%
Sheffer et al. (2008, see also Federman et al. 1980) of the 12 CO luminosity. This suggest that the mass and
showed empirical and theoretical evidence that the scat- 12
CO luminosity are uniformly spread over the area of
ter in the AV − N (CO) relation is due to variations of our Taurus map.
the ratio between the total H volume density (ntotal =
H
A commonly used method to derive the mass of molec-
nH + 2nH2 ) and the strength of the FUV radiation field. ular clouds when only 12 CO is available is the use
The larger the volume density or the weaker the strength of the empirically derived CO–to–H2 conversion factor
of the FUV field the larger the abundance of CO relative (XCO ≡ N (H2 )/ICO ≃ MH2 /LCO ). Observations of γ-
to H2 . Note that the scatter in the observations from rays indicate that this factor is 1.74×1020 cm−2 (K km
14. 14 Pineda, Goldsmith, Chapman, Snell, Li, Cambr´sy & Brunt
e
Figure 13. Comparison between the visual extinction derived from 2MASS stellar colors and the 12 CO column density derived from
13 CO and 12 CO observations in Taurus for AV < 5 mag. The blue line represents the 12 CO column density derived from AV assuming
N (H2 )/AV = 9.4 × 1020 cm−2 mag−1 (Bohlin et al. 1978) and a [CO]/[H2 ] abundance ratio of 1.1 × 10−4 . The gray scale represents the
number of pixels of a given value in the parameter space and is logarithmic in the number of pixels. The red contours are 2,10,100, and
1000 pixels. The black lines represent several models of selective CO photodissociation and fractionation provided by Ruud Visser (see
text). The light blue line represents the fit to the observations from Sheffer et al. (2008) toward diffuse molecular Galactic lines-of-sight
for log(N (H)2 ) ≥ 20.4. The horizontal line represents the average N (CO) derived in Mask 0. Each pixel has a size of 100′′ or 0.07 pc at a
distance of 140 pc.
s−1 pc−2 )−1 or M (M⊙ )=3.7LCO (K Km s−1 pc2 ) in our
Galaxy (Grenier et al. 2005). To estimate XCO in Mask
2, 1, and 0 we calculate the 12 CO luminosity (LCO ) in
these regions and compare them with the mass derived
from AV . We also calculate XCO from the average ratio
of N (H2 ) (derived from AV ) to the CO integrated inten-
sity ICO for all pixels in Mask 1 and 2. For Mask 0, we
used the ratio of the average N (H2 ) (derived from AV
) to the average CO integrated intensity obtaining after
combining all pixels in this mask region. The resulting
values are shown in Table 3. The table shows that the
difference in XCO between Mask 2 and Mask 1 is small
considering that the [CO]/[H2 ] relative abundance be-
tween these regions can differ by up to two orders of
magnitude. The derived values are close to that found in
our Galaxy using γ-ray observations. For Mask 0, how-
ever, XCO is about an order of magnitude larger than in
Mask 1 and 2.
Finally we derive the surface density of Taurus by com-
paring the total H2 mass derived from AV (15015 M⊙ )
and the total area of the cloud (388 pc2 ). Again, we
Figure 14. The average N (H2 ) and AV as a function of N (CO) assumed that in Mask 0 the CO–emitting region occu-
in Mask1. N (H2 ) is estimated from AV assuming N (H2 )/AV =
9.4 × 1020 cm−2 mag−1 (Bohlin et al. 1978). pies 26% of the area. The resulting surface density is
∼39 M⊙ pc−2 which is very similar to the median value
of 42 M⊙ pc−2 derived from a large sample of galactic
15. The relation between gas and dust in the Taurus Molecular Cloud 15
Figure 15. Probability density function of the visual extinc-
tion in the Taurus molecular cloud. The solid line corresponds
to a Gaussian fit to the distribution of the natural logarithms of
AV / AV . This fit considers only visual extinctions that are lower
than 4.4 mag, as the distribution deviates clearly from a Gaussian
for larger visual extinctions. (see text).
molecular clouds by Heyer et al. (2009).
4.2. Column density probability density function
Numerical simulations have shown that the probabil-
ity density function (PDF) of volume densities in molec-
ular clouds can be fitted by a log-normal distribution.
This distribution is found in simulations with or with-
out magnetic fields when self-gravity is not important
(Ostriker et al. 2001; Nordlund & Padoan 1999; Li et al.
2004; Klessen 2000). A log-normal distribution arises as
the gas is subject to a succession of independent compres-
sions or rarefactions that produce multiplicative varia-
tions of the volume density (Passot & V´zquez-Semadeni
a
1998; V´zquez-Semadeni & Garc´ 2001). This effect
a ıa
is therefore additive for the logarithm of the vol-
ume density. A log-normal function can also de- Figure 16. Probability density function of the visual extinction
scribe the distribution of column densities in a molec- for Mask 1 (upper panel) and Mask 2 (lower panel) in the Taurus
molecular cloud. The solid line corresponds to a Gaussian fit to
ular cloud if compressions or rarefactions along the the distribution of the natural logarithm of AV / AV . The fit
line of sight are independent (Ostriker et al. 2001; for Mask1 considers only visual extinctions that are larger than
V´zquez-Semadeni & Garc´ 2001).
a ıa Note that log– 0.24 mag, while the fit for Mask 2 includes only visual extinctions
normal distributions are not an exclusive result of su- that are less than 4.4 mag (see text).
personic turbulence as they are also seen in simulations
with the presence of self–gravity and/or strong magnetic function of the form
fields but without strong turbulence (Tassis et al. 2010).
Deviations from a log-normal in the form of (ln(x) − µ)2
f (lnx) = Npixels exp − , (29)
tails at high or low densities are expected if the 2σ 2
equation of state deviates from being isothermal
(Passot & V´zquez-Semadeni 1998; Scalo et al. 1998).
a where µ and σ 2 are the mean and variance of ln(x). The
This, however, also occurs in simulations with an isother- mean of the logarithm of the normalized column den-
mal equation of state due to the effects of self-gravity sity is related to the dispersion σ by µ = −σ 2 /2. In all
√
(Tassis et al. 2010). Gaussian fits, we consider N counting errors in each
In Figure 15 we show the histogram of the natural log- bin.
arithm of AV in the Taurus molecular cloud normalized The distribution of column densities derived from the
by its mean value (1.9 mag). Defining x ≡ N/ N , where visual extinction shows tails at large and small AV . The
N is the column density (either AV or N (H2 ) ), we fit a large–AV tail starts to be noticeable at visual extinc-
16. 16 Pineda, Goldsmith, Chapman, Snell, Li, Cambr´sy & Brunt
e
Table 3
Properties of Different Mask Regions in Taurus
Region # of Pixelsa Mass from Mass from Area [CO]/[H2 ] LCO b
XCO = N (H2 )/ICO c
XCO = M/LCO
13 CO and 12 CO AV
[M⊙ ] [M⊙ ] [pc2 ] [K km s−1 pc2 ] [cm−2 /(K km s−1 )] [M⊙ /(K km s−1 pc2 )]
Mask 0 52338 3267 3454 63d 1.2×10−6 130 1.2×1021 26
Mask 1 40101 3942 4237 185 variable 1369 1.6×1020 3.1
Mask 2 30410 7964 7412 140 1.1×10−4 1746 2.0×1020 4.2
Total 122849 15073 15103 388 3245 2.3×1020 4.6
a At the 200′′ resolution of the AV map.
b Calculated from the average ratio of N (H2 ), derived from AV , to CO integrated intensity for each pixel.
c Total mass per unit of CO luminosity.
d Effective area of CO emission based in the discussion about Mask 0 in Section 2.3.
Table 4
Mass of Different High Column Density Regions in Taurus
Region # of Pixels Mass from Mass from Area LCO
13 CO and 12 CO AV
[M⊙ ] [M⊙ ] [pc2 ] [K km s−1 pc2 ]
L1495 7523 1836 1545 35 461
B213 2880 723 640 13 155
L1521 4026 1084 1013 19 236
HCL2 3633 1303 1333 17 221
L1498 1050 213 170 5 39
L1506 1478 262 278 7 68
B18 3097 828 854 14 195
L1536 3230 474 579 15 134
Total 26917 6723 6412 125 1509
possible to determine whether it has a physical origin
or it is an effect of noise. The distribution is well fit-
ted by a log–normal for AV smaller than 4.4 mag. We
searched in our extinction map for isolated regions with
peak AV 4.4 mag. We find 57 regions that satisfy this
requirement. For each region, we counted the number
of pixels that have AV 4.4 mag and from that calcu-
lated their area, A. We then determined their size using
L = 2 (A/π). The average value for all such regions
is 0.41 pc. This value is similar to the Jeans length,
which for Tkin =10 K and n(H2 ) = 103 cm−3 is about
0.4 pc. This agreement suggests that the high–AV tail
might be a result of self–gravity acting in dense regions.
Kainulainen et al. (2009) studied the column density dis-
tribution of 23 molecular cloud complexes (including the
Taurus molecular cloud) finding tails at both large and
small visual extinctions.
Kainulainen et al. (2009) found that high–AV tails are
only present in active star–forming molecular clouds
while quiescent clouds are well fitted by a log–normal.
We test whether this result applies to regions within
Taurus in Figure 16 where we show the visual extinc-
tion PDF for the Mask 1 and 2 regions. Mask 1 includes
Figure 17. Probability density function of the H2 column den- lines–of–sights that are likely of lower volume density
sity derived from N (CO) in Mask 2 with an angular resolution of than regions in Mask 2, and in which there is little star
47′′ (0.03 pc at the distance of Taurus, 140 pc). The solid line corre- formation. This is illustrated in Figure 1 where we show
sponds to a Gaussian fit to the distribution of the natural logarithm the distribution of the Mask regions defined in our map
of N (H2 )/ N (H2 ) . The fit considers H2 column densities that are
lower than 4×1021 cm−2 (or ∼4 mag).
overlaid by the compilation of stellar members of Taurus
by Luhman et al. (2006). Most of the embedded sources
tions larger than ∼4.4 mag. The low–AV tail starts to be in Taurus are located in Mask 2. Note that the normal-
noticeable at visual extinctions smaller than ∼0.26 mag, ization of AV is different in the two mask regions. The
which is similar to the uncertainty in the determination average value of AV in Mask 1 is 0.32 mag and in Mask 2
of visual extinction (0.29 mag), and therefore it is not is 2.1 mag. In Mask 1 we see a tail for low–AV starting