A&A 416, 191-212 (2004)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20031704
On the internal structure of starless cores
I. Physical conditions and the distribution of CO, CS, N
H
,
and NH
in L1498 and L1517B
M. Tafalla1, P. C. Myers2, P. Caselli3 and C. M. Walmsley3
1 Observatorio Astronómico Nacional, Alfonso XII 3, 28014 Madrid, Spain
2 Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, 60 Garden St., Cambridge, MA 02138, USA
3 Osservatorio Astrofisico di Arcetri, Largo E. Fermi 5, 50125 Firenze, Italy
(Received 16 June 2003 / Accepted 24 November 2003)
Abstract
We have characterized the physical structure and chemical composition of two
close-to-round starless cores in Taurus-Auriga,
L1498 and L1517B. Our analysis is based
on high angular resolution observations in
at least two transitions of NH
3, N
2H
+, CS,
C
34S, C
18O, and C
17O, together with maps of the 1.2 mm
continuum. For both cores, we derive radial profiles of constant
temperature and constant turbulence, together
with density distributions close to those
of non-singular isothermal spheres. Using these physical
conditions and a Monte Carlo radiative transfer
model, we derive abundance profiles for all species
and model the strong chemical differentiation
of the core interiors. According to our
models, the NH
3 abundance increases toward the core centers
by a factor of several
5) while N
2H
+
has a constant abundance over most of the cores. In contrast, both
C
18O and CS (and isotopomers) are strongly depleted in the core
interiors, most likely due to their freeze out
onto grains at densities of a few 10
4 cm
-3. Concerning the
kinematics of the dense gas, we find (in addition to constant turbulence)
a pattern of internal motions at the level of 0.1 km s
-1.
These motions seem
correlated with asymmetries in the pattern of molecular depletion,
and we interpret them as residuals of core contraction.
Their distribution and size suggest that
core formation occurs in a rather irregular manner
and with a time scale of a Myr. A comparison of our derived core
properties with those predicted by
supersonic turbulence models of core formation
shows that our Taurus cores are much more quiescent than representative predictions from these models. In two appendices at
the end of the paper
we present a simple and accurate approximation to the density profile
of an isothermal (Bonnor-Ebert) sphere, and a Monte Carlo-calibrated
method to derive gas kinetic temperatures using NH
3 data.
Key words: ISM: abundances -- ISM: clouds -- ISM: molecules -- stars: formation -- ISM: individual objects: L1498, L1517B
Offprint request: M. Tafalla, m.tafalla@oan.es
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