Data di Pubblicazione:
2002
Abstract:
We have mapped the large-scale structure of the Serpens cloud core using
moderately optically thick (13CO(1-0) and CS(2-1)) and optically thin
tracers (C18O(1-0), C34S(2-1), and N_2H+(1-0)), using the 16-element focal
plane array operating at a wavelength of 3 mm at the Five College Radio
Astronomy Observatory. Our main goal was to study the large-scale
distribution of the molecular gas in the Serpens region and to understand
its relation with the denser gas in the cloud cores, previously studied at
high angular resolution. All our molecular tracers show two main gas
condensations, or sub-clumps, roughly corresponding to the North-West and
South-East clusters of submillimeter continuum sources. We also carried out
a kinematical study of the Serpens cloud. The 13CO and 13COI(1-0) maps of
the centroid velocity show an increasing, smooth gradient in velocity from
East to West, which we think may be caused by a global rotation of the
Serpens molecular cloud whose rotation axis is roughly aligned in the SN
direction. Although it appears that the cloud angular momentum is not
sufficient for being dynamically important in the global evolution of the
cluster, the fact that the observed molecular outflows are roughly aligned
with it may suggest a link between the large-scale angular momentum and the
circumstellar disks around individual protostars in the cluster. We also
used the normalized centroid velocity difference as an infall indicator. We
find two large regions of the map, approximately coincident with the SE and
NW sub-clumps, which are undergoing an infalling motion. Although our
evidence is not conclusive, our data appear to be in qualitative agreement
with the expectation of a slow contraction followed by a rapid and highly
efficient star formation phase in localized high density regions.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Link alla scheda completa: