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A&A 460, 709-720 (2006)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20066105
Searching for massive pre-stellar cores through observations of N
H+ and N
D+
F. Fontani1, P. Caselli2, A. Crapsi3, R. Cesaroni2, S. Molinari4, L. Testi2, and J. Brand1 1 INAF, Istituto di Radioastronomia, CNR, Via Gobetti 101, 40129 Bologna, Italy
e-mail: ffontani@ira.inaf.it
2 INAF, Osservatorio Astrofisico di Arcetri, Largo E. Fermi 5, 50125 Firenze, Italy
3 Leiden Observatory, Postbus 9513, 2300 RA Leiden, The Netherlands
4 INAF, Istituto di Fisica dello Spazio Interpalenatrio, Via Fosso del Cavaliere, 00133 Roma, Italy
(Received 25 July 2006 / Accepted 27 August 2006 )
Abstract
Aims.We have measured the deuterium fractionation and the CO depletion factor
(ratio between expected and observed CO abundance) in a sample of
high-mass protostellar candidates, in order to understand whether the
earliest evolutionary stages of high-mass stars have
chemical characteristics similar to those of low-mass ones.
It has been found that low-mass starless cores on the
verge of star formation have large values both of the
column density ratio
and of
the CO depletion factor.
Methods.With the IRAM-30 m telescope and the JCMT we have observed
two rotational lines of N2H+ and N2D+,
the (2-1) line of C17O and DCO+, and the sub-millimeter
continuum towards a sample of 10 high-mass protostellar candidates.
Results.We have detected N2D+ emission in 7 of the
10 sources of our sample, and found an average value
. This value is
~3 orders of magnitude larger than the interstellar D/H ratio,
indicating the presence of cold and dense gas, in which the
physical-chemical conditions are similar to those observed in
low-mass pre-stellar cores. The integrated CO depletion factors
show that in the majority of the sources the expected CO abundances
are larger than the observed values, with a median ratio
of 3.2.
Conclusions.In principle, the cold gas that generates the N2D+ emission
can be the remnant of the massive molecular core in which the high-mass
(proto-)star was born, not yet heated up by the central object.
If so, our results indicate that the chemical
properties of the clouds in which high-mass stars are born are
similar to their low-mass counterparts. Alternatively, this cold gas
could be located in one (or more) starless core (cores) near
the protostellar object. Due to the poor angular resolution of our data,
we cannot distinguish between the two scenarios.
Key words: stars: formation -- ISM: molecules
© ESO 2006
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