Free access article
| Issue |
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A&A
Volume 433,
Number 2,
April II 2005
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Page(s)
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535 - 552 |
| Section |
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Interstellar and circumstellar matter |
| DOI |
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10.1051/0004-6361:20041914 |
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A&A 433, 535-552 (2005)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20041914
Chemical evolution in the environment of
intermediate mass young stellar objects
NGC 7129 - FIRS 2 and
LkH
234
A. Fuente1, J. R. Rizzo1, 2, P. Caselli3, R. Bachiller1 and C. Henkel4 1
Observatorio Astronómico Nacional (IGN), Campus
Universitario, Apdo. 112, 28803 Alcalá de Henares (Madrid), Spain
e-mail: a.fuente@oan.es
2
Departamento de Física, Universidad Europea de Madrid, Urb. El Bosque,
28670 Villaviciosa de Odón, Spain
3
Osservatorio Astrofisico di Arcetri, Largo Enrico Fermi 5, 50125 Firenze, Italy
4
Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie, Auf dem Hügel 69, 53121 Bonn, Germany
(Received 27 August 2004 / Accepted 15 November 2004)
Abstract
We have carried out a molecular survey of the Class 0 IM protostar NGC 7129 - FIRS 2
(hereafter FIRS 2) and the Herbig
Be star LkH
234 with the aim of studying the chemical evolution of the envelopes of
intermediate-mass (IM) young stellar
objects (YSOs). The two objects have similar luminosities (~500
) and
are located in the same molecular cloud which minimizes the
chemical differences due to different stellar masses or initial cloud
conditions. Moreover, since they are located at the same distance,
we have the same spatial resolution in both objects. A total of 17 molecular species
(including rare isotopes) have been observed in both objects and the structure of their
envelopes and outflows has been determined with unprecedent detail.
Our results show that the protostellar envelopes are dispersed and warmed up during the
evolution of the YSO into a pre-main sequence star. In fact, the envelope mass decreases by
a factor >5 from FIRS 2 to LkH

234,
while the kinetic temperature increases
from ~13 K to 28 K. On the other hand, there is no molecular outflow
associated with LkH

234. The molecular outflow seems to stop before the star becomes
visible.
These physical changes strongly affect the chemistry
of their envelopes. The N
2H
+ and NH
3 abundances seem to be quite
similar in the two objects. However, the H
13CO
+ abundance is a factor of ~3 lower
in the densest part of FIRS 2 than in LkH

234, very likely because of depletion. In contrast, the
SiO abundance is larger by a factor of ~100 in FIRS 2 than in LkH

234.
CS presents complex behavior since its emission arises in different envelope
components (outflow, cold envelope, hot core) and could also suffer from depletion.
The CH
3OH and H
2CO column densities are very similar in FIRS 2 and
LkH

234 which implies that the beam-averaged abundances are
a factor >5 larger in LkH

234 than in FIRS 2.
The same is found for the
PDR tracers CN and HCN which have similar column densities in both objects. Finally,
complex behavior is found for the deuterated compounds. While the DCO
+/H
13CO
+
ratio decreases by a factor of ~4 from FIRS 2 to LkH

234, the D
2CO/H
2CO
ratios is within a factor 1.5 in both objects.
The detection of a warm CH
3CN component with
Tk >63 K shows the existence of a hot core in FIRS 2.
Thus far, only a handful of hot cores have been detected
in low and intermediate mass stars.
Based on our results in FIRS 2 and LkH

234, we propose some abundance
ratios that can be used as chemical clocks for the envelopes of IM YSOs.
The SiO/CS, CN/N
2H
+, HCN/N
2H
+, DCO
+/HCO
+ and
D
2CO/DCO
+ ratios are good diagnostics of the protostellar evolutionary stage.
Key words: stars: formation
-- stars: pre-main sequence
-- stars: individual: LkH

234
--
ISM: abundances
-- ISM: clouds
-- ISM: individual objects: NGC 7129
SIMBAD Objects
© ESO 2005
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