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Comparison of Two Epochs of the Zeeman Effect in the 44 GHz Class I methanol (CH3OH) maser line in OMC-2

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 Added by Emmanuel Momjian
 Publication date 2012
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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We present a second epoch of observations of the 44 GHz Class I methanol maser line toward the star forming region OMC-2. The observations were carried out with the Very Large Array, and constitute one of the first successful Zeeman effect detections with the new WIDAR correlator. Comparing to the result of our earlier epoch of data for this region, we find that the intensity of the maser increased by 50%, but the magnetic field value has stayed the same, within the errors. This suggests that the methanol maser may be tracing the large-scale magnetic field that is not affected by the bulk gas motions or turbulence on smaller scales that is causing the change in maser intensity.



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We report the detection of the Zeeman effect in the 44 GHz Class I methanol maser line toward the high mass star forming region DR21W. There are two prominent maser spots in DR21W at the ends of a northwest-southeast linear arrangement. For the maser at the northwestern end (maser A), we fit three Gaussian components. In the strongest component, we obtain a significant Zeeman detection, with $zB_{rm los}=-23.4pm3.2$ Hz. If we use $z=-0.920$ Hz mG$^{-1}$ for the $F=5 rightarrow 4$ hyperfine transition, this corresponds to a magnetic field $|B_{rm los}|=25.4$ mG; $B_{rm los}$ would be higher if a different hyperfine was responsible for the 44 GHz maser, but our results also rule out some hyperfines, since fields in these regions cannot be hundreds of mG. Class I methanol masers form in outflows where shocks compress magnetic fields in proportion to gas density. Designating our detected $B_{rm los}=25$ mG as the magnetic field in the post-shock gas, we find that $B_{rm los}$ in the pre-shock gas should be 0.1-0.8 mG. Although there are no thermal-line Zeeman detections toward DR21W, such values are in good agreement with Zeeman measurements in the CN thermal line of 0.36 and 0.71 mG about $3.5$ away in DR21(OH) in gas of comparable density to the pre-shock gas density in DR21W. Comparison of our derived magnetic energy density to the kinetic energy density in DR21W indicates that magnetic fields likely play a significant role in shaping the dynamics of the post-shocked gas in DR21W.
154 - E. Momjian , A. P. Sarma 2016
We report the detection of the Zeeman effect in the 44 GHz Class I methanol maser line toward the star forming region DR21(OH). In a 219 Jy/beam maser centered at an LSR velocity of 0.83 km s$^{-1}$, we find a 20-$sigma$ detection of $zB_{text{los}} = 53.5 pm 2.7$ Hz. If 44 GHz methanol masers are excited at $n sim 10^{7-8}$ cm$^{-3}$, then the $B~vs.~n^{1/2}$ relation would imply from comparison with Zeeman effect detections in the CN($1-0$) line toward DR21(OH) that magnetic fields traced by 44 GHz methanol masers in DR21(OH) should be $sim$10 mG. Together with our detected $zB_{text{los}} = 53.5$ Hz, this would imply that the value of the 44 GHz methanol Zeeman splitting factor $z$ is $sim$5 Hz mG$^{-1}$. Such small values of $z$ would not be a surprise, as the methanol molecule is non paramagnetic, like H$_2$O. Empirical attempts to determine $z$, as demonstrated, are important because currently there are no laboratory measurements or theoretically calculated values of $z$ for the 44 GHz methanol transition. Data from observations of a larger number of sources are needed to make such empirical determinations robust.
221 - Simon Ellingsen 2014
We have used the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) to search for emission from the $4_{-1} rightarrow 3_{0}E$ transition of methanol (36.2 GHz) towards the center of the nearby starburst galaxy NGC253. Two regions of emission were detected, offset from the nucleus along the same position angle as the inner spiral arms. The emission is largely unresolved on a scale of 5 arcsec, has a full-width half maximum (FWHM) line width of < 30 km s$^{-1}$, and an isotropic luminosity orders of magnitude larger than that observed in any Galactic star formation regions. These characteristics suggest that the 36.2 GHz methanol emission is most likely a maser, although observations with higher angular and spectral resolution are required to confirm this. If it is a maser this represents the first detection of a class I methanol maser outside the Milky Way. The 36.2 GHz methanol emission in NGC253 has more than an order of magnitude higher isotropic luminosity than the widespread emission recently detected towards the center of the Milky Way. If emission from this transition scales with nuclear star formation rate then it may be detectable in the central regions of many starburst galaxies. Detection of methanol emission in ultra-luminous infra-red galaxies (ULIRGs) would open up a new tool for testing for variations in fundamental constants (in particular the proton-to-electron mass ratio) on cosmological scales.
122 - S.P. Ellingsen 2011
We report the results of a search for class II methanol masers at 37.7, 38.3 and 38.5 GHz towards a sample of 70 high-mass star formation regions. We primarily searched towards regions known to show emission either from the 107 GHz class II methanol maser transition, or from the 6.035 GHz excited OH transition. We detected maser emission from 13 sources in the 37.7 GHz transition, eight of these being new detections. We detected maser emission from three sources in the 38 GHz transitions, one of which is a new detection. We find that 37.7 GHz methanol masers are only associated with the most luminous 6.7 and 12.2 GHz methanol maser sources, which in turn are hypothesised to be the oldest class II methanol sources. We suggest that the 37.7 GHz methanol masers are associated with a brief evolutionary phase (of 1000-4000 years) prior to the cessation of class II methanol maser activity in the associated high-mass star formation region.
We have carried out the first very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) imaging of 44 GHz class I methanol maser (7_{0}-6_{1}A^{+}) associated with a millimeter core MM2 in a massive star-forming region IRAS 18151-1208 with KaVA (KVN and VERA Array), which is a newly combined array of KVN (Korean VLBI Network) and VERA (VLBI Exploration of Radio Astrometry). We have succeeded in imaging compact maser features with a synthesized beam size of 2.7 milliarcseconds x 1.5 milliarcseconds (mas). These features are detected at a limited number of baselines within the length of shorter than approximately 650 km corresponding to 100 Mlambda in the uv-coverage. The central velocity and the velocity width of the 44 GHz methanol maser are consistent with those of the quiescent gas rather than the outflow traced by the SiO thermal line. The minimum component size among the maser features is ~ 5 mas x 2 mas, which corresponds to the linear size of ~ 15 AU x 6 AU assuming a distance of 3 kpc. The brightness temperatures of these features range from ~ 3.5 x 10^{8} to 1.0 x 10^{10} K, which are higher than estimated lower limit from a previous Very Large Array observation with the highest spatial resolution of ~ 50 mas. The 44 GHz class I methanol maser in IRAS 18151-1208 is found to be associated with the MM2 core, which is thought to be less evolved than another millimeter core MM1 associated with the 6.7 GHz class II methanol maser.
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