Bibcode
López, R.; García-Lorenzo, B.; Estalella, R.; Riera, A.; Carrasco-González, C.; Gomez-Velarde, G.
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 424, Issue 3, pp. 1817-1825.
Advertised on:
8
2012
Citations
1
Refereed citations
1
Description
HH 223 is the optical counterpart of a larger scale H2
outflow, driven by the protostellar source VLA 2A, in L723. Its poorly
collimated and rather chaotic morphology suggested Integral Field
Spectroscopy (IFS) as an appropriate option to map the emission in order
to derive the physical conditions and kinematics. Here we present new
results based on IFS observations made with the INTEGRAL system at the
William Herschel Telescope. The brightest knots of HH 223 (˜16
arcsec, ≃0.02 pc at a distance of 300 pc) were mapped with a single
pointing in the spectral range 6200-7700 Å. We obtained
emission-line intensity maps for Hα, [N II] 6584 Å and [S
II] 6716, 6731 Å and explored the distribution of the excitation
and electron density from [N II]/Hα, [S II]/Hα and [S II]
6716/6731 line-ratio maps. Maps of the radial velocity field were
obtained. We analysed the three-dimensional kinematics by combining the
knot radial velocities derived from IFS data with the knot proper
motions derived from multi-epoch narrow-band images. The intensity maps
built from IFS data reproduced the morphology found in the narrow-band
images well. We checked the results obtained from previous long-slit
observations with those derived from IFS spectra extracted with a
similar spatial sampling. At the positions intersected by the slit, the
physical conditions and kinematics derived from IFS are compatible with
those derived from long-slit data. In contrast, significant
discrepancies were found when the results from long-slit data were
compared with the ones derived from IFS spectra extracted at positions
shifted a few arcsec from those intersected by the slit. This clearly
revealed IFS observations as the best choice to obtain a reliable
picture of the HH emission properties.
Related projects
Physical properties and evolution of Massive Stars
This project aims at the searching, observation and analysis of massive stars in nearby galaxies to provide a solid empirical ground to understand their physical properties as a function of those key parameters that gobern their evolution (i.e. mass, spin, metallicity, mass loss, and binary interaction). Massive stars are central objects to
Sergio
Simón Díaz