JCMT Newsletter No.22 (Debris Disks)
The G75.78 Region:
Massive Stars Spawning Massive Stars
Joel H. Kastner & Zoran Ninkov
Rochester Institute of Astronomy
& Gerald H. Moriarty-Schieven
National Research Council of Canada, Joint Astronomy Centre
Most stars are born in
sites, such as Orion, that contain luminous, massive stars. The
HII regions and supernova remnants resulting from
the presence of such high-mass (O and B) stars have long
been thought to significantly alter or even disrupt the parent
clouds. This process remains
mysterious, however, due to the scarcity of nearby
examples of regions actively forming massive stars. For example,
while bipolar molecular outflows are known to be
associated with certain massive protostars (e.g., Kastner et
al. 1994; Shepherd & Churchwell 1996), the outflow
energetics are not well understood and the outflow
sources themselves are poorly characterized. It is
also apparent that the chemistry of cloud cores spawning
low-mass stars (and the protoplanets potentially
surrounding them) is profoundly influenced by
the intense UV from massive protostars. However, the impact of outflows and
UV from massive stars on the molecular cloud environment ---
and, hence, on future generations of young stars --- remains
to be determined.
Figure 1: 10'X8' JCMT CO(2-1) integrated
velocity map of the G75.78 region.
We have been using the JCMT to map
molecular line emission from the vicinity of
G75.78, which lies within the maser complex ON 2. This
complex region includes
a large number of massive stars, spanning a remarkably wide
range of evolutionary stages. G75.78 has long been known to
harbor a group of ultracompact HII (UCHII) regions
and masers (Baud 1977) and hosts a luminous far-IR source
(IRAS 20198+3716), indicative of the presence
of massive, deeply embedded protostars. Much of this massive
star formation activity may lie within 1 kpc, based
on the proximity of G75.78 to Berkeley 87 (B87), an optical
cluster of ~100 members located on the boundary of the
Cygnus X region (Turner & Forbes 1982). The distance to B87
appears well constrained, at D~900 pc (Polcaro et al.
1991). Furthermore, B87 itself features an unusually rich
menagerie of optically luminous objects, including a rare WO
star [WR 142 = ST 3], a blue straggler, the unusual variable
V439 Cyg, and the red supergiant BC Cyg (Polcaro et al.
1991).
Although it is only twice the distance to the Orion
molecular cloud complexes, and is far richer in terms of its
massive star component, the G75.78/B87 region remains
surprisingly understudied. This lack of attention is
notable given the likelihood that the G75.78/B87 region
illustrates an episodic, massive star formation sequence
that is now making its way through, and perhaps is in the
process of dispersing, a giant molecular cloud that lies no
more than about 1 kpc from the Sun. The G75.78/B87 region
also potentially offers an observational test of models of
the effects of massive star winds and UV fields on the
circumstellar environments of solar-mass (late-type) stars.
We are now exploiting the proximity and richness of the
G75.78/B87 region to better constrain
these and other massive star formation processes. We have recently
obtained (semester 02A) a 10'X8' JCMT map of G75.78 in
12CO(2--1) (Kastner, Moriarty-Schieven, &
Ninkov, in prep.). This map has
yielded detections of CO clumps and outflows in the immediate vicinity of
IRAS 20198+3716 which, in turn, appears to be associated with a
deeply embedded young cluster (Fig. 1). These
results provide strong evidence for
interactions between outflows from massive young stars and ambient cloud
material in G75.78, providing new insight
into its present star formation activity and its
star formation history.
Figure 2: Contours of the CO
map, overlaid on
a 2MASS K band image. The center of
the Berkeley 87 optical cluster lies approximately midway
between the southern CO peaks (B and C). Note
the appearance of an embedded
cluster of young stars between the brightest CO
peaks (A and B); this cluster is not detected in optical
images. IRAS 20198+3716 lies very near the
center of the IR nebulosity
associated with this cluster.
References
Baud 1977, A&A 57, 443
Comeron & Torra 2001, A&A 375, 539
Kastner et al. 1994, ApJ 425, 695
Polcaro et al. 1991, A&A 252, 590
Shepherd & Churchwell 1996, ApJ 472, 225
Turner & Forbes 1982, PASP, 94, 789
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Gerald Moriarty Schieven
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