ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
We measure H$_2$ temperatures and column densities across the Orion BN/KL explosive outflow from a set of thirteen near-IR H$_2$ rovibrational emission lines observed with the TripleSpec spectrograph on Apache Point Observatorys 3.5-meter telescope. We find that most of the region is well-characterized by a single temperature (~2000-2500 K), which may be influenced by the limited range of upper energy levels (6000-20,000 K) probed by our data set. The H$_2$ column density maps indicate that warm H$_2$ comprises 10$^{-5}$ - 10$^{-3}$ of the total H$_2$ column density near the center of the outflow. Combining column density measurements for co-spatial H$_2$ and CO at T = 2500 K, we measure a CO/H$_2$ fractional abundance of 2$times$10$^{-3}$, and discuss possible reasons why this value is in excess of the canonical 10$^{-4}$ value, including dust attenuation, incorrect assumptions on co-spatiality of the H$_2$ and CO emission, and chemical processing in an extreme environment. We model the radiative transfer of H$_2$ in this region with UV pumping models to look for signatures of H$_2$ fluorescence from H I Ly$alpha$ pumping. Dissociative (J-type) shocks and nebular emission from the foreground Orion H II region are considered as possible Ly$alpha$ sources. From our radiative transfer models, we predict that signatures of Ly$alpha$ pumping should be detectable in near-IR line ratios given a sufficiently strong source, but such a source is not present in the BN/KL outflow. The data are consistent with shocks as the H$_2$ heating source.
We present near-IR (1.1-2.4 micron) position-position-velocity cubes of the 500-year-old Orion BN/KL explosive outflow with spatial resolution 1 and spectral resolution 86 km/s. We construct integrated intensity maps free of continuum sources of 15 H
Vibration-rotation lines of H$_{2}$ from highly excited levels approaching the dissociation limit have been detected at a number of locations in the shocked gas of the Orion Molecular Cloud (OMC-1), including in a Herbig-Haro object near the tip of o
High spatial resolution low-J 12CO observations have shown that the wide-angle outflow seen in the Orion BN/KL region correlates with the famous H2 fingers. Recently, high-resolution large-scale mappings of mid- and higher-J CO emissions have been re
We present high-resolution images of the submillimeter SiO line emissions of a massive young stellar object Orion Source I using the Atacama Large Millimeter/ Submillimeter Array (ALMA) at band 8. We detected the 464 GHz SiO v=4 J=11-10 line in Sourc
The explosive molecular outflow detected decades ago in the Orion BN/KL region of massive star formation was considered to be a bizarre event. This belief was strengthened by the non detection of similar cases over the years with the only exception o