A. Zavagno
University of Provence
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Featured researches published by A. Zavagno.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2009
F. Schuller; K. M. Menten; Y. Contreras; F. Wyrowski; P. Schilke; L. Bronfman; T. Henning; C. M. Walmsley; H. Beuther; Sylvain Bontemps; R. Cesaroni; L. Deharveng; Guido Garay; Fabrice Herpin; B. Lefloch; H. Linz; Diego Mardones; V. Minier; S. Molinari; F. Motte; L.-Å. Nyman; V. Revéret; Christophe Risacher; D. Russeil; N. Schneider; L. Testi; T. Troost; T. Vasyunina; M. Wienen; A. Zavagno
Context. Thanks to its excellent 5100 m high site in Chajnantor, the Atacama Pathfinder Experiment (APEX) systematically explore s the southern sky at submillimeter wavelengths, both in continuum and in spectral line emission. Studying continuum emission from interstellar dust is essential to locate the highest densit y regions in the interstellar medium, and to derive their masses, column densities, density structures, and larger scale morpholog ies. In particular, the early stages of (massive) star forma tion are still quite mysterious: only small samples of high-mass proto-stellar or young stellar objects have been studied in detail so far. Aims. Our goal is to produce a large scale, systematic database of massive pre- and proto-stellar clumps in the Galaxy, in order to better understand how and under what conditions star formation takes place. Only a systematic survey of the Galactic Plane can provide the statistical basis for unbiased studies. A well characteriz ed sample of Galactic star-forming sites will deliver an evolutionary sequence and a mass function of high-mass star-forming clumps. Such a systematic survey at submillimeter wavelengths also represents a pioneering work in preparation for Herschel and ALMA. Methods. The APEX telescope is ideally located to observe the inner Milky Way. The recently commissioned Large APEX Bolometer Camera (LABOCA) is a 295-element bolometer array observing at 870 µm, with a beam of 19. ′′ 2. Taking advantage of its large field of view (11. ′ 4) and excellent sensitivity, we have started an unbiased survey of the whole Galactic Plane accessible to APEX, with a typical noise level of 50‐70 mJy/beam: the APEX Telescope Large Area Survey of the Galaxy (ATLASGAL). Results. As a first step, we have covered ∼95 deg 2 of the Galactic Plane. These data reveal∼6000 compact sources brighter than 0.25 Jy, or 63 sources per square degree, as well as extended structures, many of them filamentary. About two thirds of the c ompact sources have no bright infrared counterpart, and some of them are likely to correspond to the precursors of (high-mass) proto-stars or proto-clusters. Other compact sources harbor hot cores, compact Hii regions or young embedded clusters, thus tracing more evolved stages after star formation has occurred. Assuming a typical distance of 5 kpc, most sources are clumps smaller than 1 pc with masses from a few 10 to a few 100 M⊙. In this first introductory paper, we show preliminary resul ts from these ongoing observations, and discuss the mid- and long-term perspectives of the survey.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010
L. Deharveng; F. Schuller; L. D. Anderson; A. Zavagno; F. Wyrowski; K. M. Menten; L. Bronfman; L. Testi; C. M. Walmsley; M. Wienen
Context. This study deals with infrared bubbles, the H ii regions they enclose, and triggered massive-star formation on their borders. Aims: We attempt to determine the nature of the bubbles observed by Spitzer in the Galactic plane, mainly to establish if possible their association with massive stars. We take advantage of the very simple morphology of these objects to search for star formation triggered by H ii regions, and to estimate the importance of this mode of star formation. Methods: We consider a sample of 102 bubbles detected by Spitzer-GLIMPSE, and catalogued by Churchwell et al. (2006; hereafter CH06). We use mid-infrared and radio-continuum public data (respectively the Spitzer-GLIMPSE and -MIPSGAL surveys and the MAGPIS and VGPS surveys) to discuss their nature. We use the ATLASGAL survey at 870 μm to search for dense neutral material collected on their borders. The 870 μm data traces the distribution of cold dust, thus of the dense neutral material where stars may form. Results: We find that 86% of the bubbles contain ionized gas detected by means of its radio-continuum emission at 20-cm. Thus, most of the bubbles observed at 8.0 μm enclose H ii regions ionized by O-B2 stars. This finding differs from the earlier CH06 results (~25% of the bubbles enclosing H ii regions). Ninety-eight percent of the bubbles exhibit 24 μm emission in their central regions. The ionized regions at the center of the 8.0 μm bubbles seem to be devoid of PAHs but contain hot dust. PAH emission at 8.0 μm is observed in the direction of the photodissociation regions surrounding the ionized gas. Among the 65 regions for which the angular resolution of the observations is high enough to resolve the spatial distribution of cold dust at 870 μm, we find that 40% are surrounded by cold dust, and that another 28% contain interacting condensations. The former are good candidates for the collect and collapse process, as they display an accumulation of dense material at their borders. The latter are good candidates for the compression of pre-existing condensations by the ionized gas. Thirteen bubbles exhibit associated ultracompact H ii regions in the direction of dust condensations adjacent to their ionization fronts. Another five show methanol masers in similar condensations. Conclusions: Our results suggest that more than a quarter of the bubbles may have triggered the formation of massive objects. Therefore, star formation triggered by H ii regions may be an important process, especially for massive-star formation. Appendices are only available in electronic form at http://www.aanda.org
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010
V. Könyves; P. André; A. Men'shchikov; N. Schneider; D. Arzoumanian; Sylvain Bontemps; M. Attard; F. Motte; P. Didelon; A. Maury; Alain Abergel; B. Ali; J.-P. Baluteau; J.-Ph. Bernard; L. Cambrésy; P. Cox; J. Di Francesco; A. M. di Giorgio; Matthew Joseph Griffin; Peter Charles Hargrave; M. Huang; Jason M. Kirk; J. Z. Li; Peter G. Martin; V. Minier; S. Molinari; G. Olofsson; S. Pezzuto; D. Russeil; Helene Roussel
The origin and possible universality of the stellar initial mass function (IMF) is a major issue in astrophysics. One of the main objectives of the Herschel Gould Belt Survey is to clarify the link between the prestellar core mass function (CMF) and the IMF. We present and discuss the core mass function derived from Herschel data for the large population of prestellar cores discovered with SPIRE and PACS in the Aquila Rift cloud complex at d ~ 260 pc. We detect a total of 541 starless cores in the entire ~11 deg^2 area of the field imaged at 70-500 micron with SPIRE/PACS. Most of these cores appear to be gravitationally bound, and thus prestellar in nature. Our Herschel results confirm that the shape of the prestellar CMF resembles the stellar IMF, with much higher quality statistics than earlier submillimeter continuum ground-based surveys.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2012
N. Schneider; T. Csengeri; M. Hennemann; F. Motte; P. Didelon; Christoph Federrath; Sylvain Bontemps; J. Di Francesco; D. Arzoumanian; V. Minier; P. André; T. Hill; A. Zavagno; Q. Nguyen-Luong; M. Attard; J.-Ph. Bernard; D. Elia; C. Fallscheer; Matthew Joseph Griffin; Jason M. Kirk; Ralf S. Klessen; V. Könyves; P. G. Martin; A. Men'shchikov; P. Palmeirim; Nicolas Peretto; M. Pestalozzi; D. Russeil; S. Sadavoy; T. Sousbie
For many years feedback processes generated by OB-stars in molecular clouds, including expanding ionization fronts, stellar winds, or UV-radiation, have been proposed to trigger subsequent star formation. However, hydrodynamic models including radiation and gravity show that UV-illumination has little or no impact on the global dynamical evolution of the cloud. The Rosette molecular cloud, irradiated by the NGC2244 cluster, is a template region for triggered star-formation, and we investigated its spatial and density structure by applying a curvelet analysis, a filament-tracing algorithm (DisPerSE), and probability density functions (PDFs) on Herschel column density maps, obtained within the HOBYS key program. The analysis reveals not only the filamentary structure of the cloud but also that all known infrared clusters except one lie at junctions of filaments, as predicted by turbulence simulations. The PDFs of sub-regions in the cloud show systematic differences. The two UV-exposed regions have a double-peaked PDF we interprete as caused by shock compression. The deviations of the PDF from the log-normal shape typically associated with low- and high-mass star-forming regions at Av~3-4m and 8-10m, respectively, are found here within the very same cloud. This shows that there is no fundamental difference in the density structure of low- and high-mass star-forming regions. We conclude that star-formation in Rosette - and probably in high-mass star-forming clouds in general - is not globally triggered by the impact of UV-radiation. Moreover, star formation takes place in filaments that arose from the primordial turbulent structure built up during the formation of the cloud. Clusters form at filament mergers, but star formation can be locally induced in the direct interaction zone between an expanding HII--region and the molecular cloud.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2011
S. Molinari; John Bally; Alberto Noriega-Crespo; M. Compiegne; J.-P. Bernard; D. Paradis; P. Martin; L. Testi; M. J. Barlow; T. J. T. Moore; R. Plume; B. M. Swinyard; A. Zavagno; L. Calzoletti; A. M. di Giorgio; D. Elia; F. Faustini; P. Natoli; M. Pestalozzi; S. Pezzuto; F. Piacentini; G. Polenta; D. Polychroni; E. Schisano; A. Traficante; M. Veneziani; Cara Battersby; Michael G. Burton; Sean J. Carey; Yasuo Fukui
Thermal images of cold dust in the Central Molecular Zone of the Milky Way, obtained with the far-infrared cameras on board the Herschel satellite, reveal a similar to 3 x 10(7) M-circle dot ring of dense and cold clouds orbiting the Galactic center. Using a simple toy model, an elliptical shape having semi-major axes of 100 and 60 pc is deduced. The major axis of this 100 pc ring is inclined by about 40 degrees with respect to the plane of the sky and is oriented perpendicular to the major axes of the Galactic Bar. The 100 pc ring appears to trace the system of stable x(2) orbits predicted for the barred Galactic potential. Sgr A* is displaced with respect to the geometrical center of symmetry of the ring. The ring is twisted and its morphology suggests a flattening ratio of 2 for the Galactic potential, which is in good agreement with the bulge flattening ratio derived from the 2MASS data.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010
F. Motte; A. Zavagno; Sylvain Bontemps; N. Schneider; M. Hennemann; J. Di Francesco; P. André; P. Saraceno; Matthew Joseph Griffin; A. Marston; Derek Ward-Thompson; G. J. White; V. Minier; A. Men'shchikov; T. Hill; Alain Abergel; L. D. Anderson; H. Aussel; Zoltan Balog; J.-P. Baluteau; J.-Ph. Bernard; P. Cox; T. Csengeri; L. Deharveng; P. Didelon; A. M. di Giorgio; Peter Charles Hargrave; M. Huang; Jason M. Kirk; S. J. Leeks
We present the initial highlights of the HOBYS key program, which are based on Herschel images of the Rosette molecular complex and maps of the RCW120 H ii region. Using both SPIRE at 250/350/500 μm and PACS at 70/160 μm or 100/160 μm, the HOBYS survey provides an unbiased and complete census of intermediate- to high-mass young stellar objects, some of which are not detected by Spitzer. Key core properties, such as bolometric luminosity and mass (as derived from spectral energy distributions), are used to constrain their evolutionary stages. We identify a handful of high-mass prestellar cores and show that their lifetimes could be shorter in the Rosette molecular complex than in nearby low-mass star-forming regions. We also quantify the impact of expanding H ii regions on the star formation process acting in both Rosette and RCW 120.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010
J.-Ph. Bernard; D. Paradis; D. J. Marshall; L. Montier; Guilaine Lagache; R. Paladini; M. Veneziani; Christopher M. Brunt; J. C. Mottram; Peter G. Martin; I. Ristorcelli; Alberto Noriega-Crespo; M. Compiegne; Nicolas Flagey; L. D. Anderson; Cristina Popescu; Richard J. Tuffs; William T. Reach; G. J. White; M. Benedetti; L. Calzoletti; A. M. DiGiorgio; F. Faustini; M. Juvela; C. Joblin; G. Joncas; M.-A. Mivilles-Deschenes; Luca Olmi; A. Traficante; F. Piacentini
New observations withHerschel allow accurate measurement of the equilibrium temperature of large dust grains heated by the interstellar radiation field (ISRF), which is critical in deriving dust column density and masses. We present temperature maps derived from the Herschel SPIRE and PACS data in two fields along the Galactic plane, obtained as part of the Hi-GAL survey during the Herschel science demonstration phase (SDP). We analyze the distribution of the dust temperature spatially, as well as along the two lines-of-sight (LOS) through the Galaxy. The zero-level offsets in the Herschel maps were established by comparison with the IRAS and Planck data at comparable wavelengths. We derive maps of the dust temperature and optical depth by adjusting a detailed model for dust emission at each pixel. The dust temperature maps show variations in the ISRF intensity and reveal the intricate mixture of the warm dust heated by massive stars and the cold filamentary structures of embedded molecular clouds. The dust optical depth at 250 μm is well correlated with the gas column density, but with a significantly higher dust emissivity than in the solar neighborhood. We correlate the optical depth with 3-D cubes of the dust extinction to investigate variations in the ISRF strength and dust abundance along the line of sight through the spiral structure of the Galaxy. We show that the warmest dust along the LOS is located in the spiral arms of the Galaxy, and we quantify their respective IR contribution.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2006
A. Zavagno; Lise Deharveng; Fernando Comeron; J. Brand; Fabrizio Massi; James Caplan; D. Russeil
We present SEST-SIMBA 1.2-mm continuum maps and ESO-NTT SOFIJHKS images of the Galactic H ii region RCW 79. The millimetre continuum data reveal the presence of massive fragments located in a dust emission ring surrounding the ionized gas. The two most massive fragments are diametrically opposite each other in the ring. The near-IR data, centred on the compact H ii region located at the south-eastern border of RCW 79, show the presence of an IR-bright cluster containing massive stars along with young stellar objects with near-IR excesses. A bright near- and mid-IR source is detected towards maser emissions, 1.2 pc north-east of the compact H ii region centre. Additional information, extracted from the Spitzer GLIMPSE survey, are used to discuss the nature of the bright IR sources observed towards RCW 79. Twelve luminous Class I sources are identified towards the most massive millimetre fragments. All these facts strongly indicate that the massive-star formation observed at the border of the H ii region RCW 79 has been triggered by its expansion, most probably by the collect and collapse process.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2012
M. Hennemann; F. Motte; N. Schneider; P. Didelon; T. Hill; D. Arzoumanian; Sylvain Bontemps; T. Csengeri; P. André; V. Könyves; F. Louvet; A. Marston; A. Men’shchikov; V. Minier; Q. Nguyen Luong; P. Palmeirim; Nicolas Peretto; Marc Sauvage; A. Zavagno; L. D. Anderson; J.-Ph. Bernard; J. Di Francesco; D. Elia; J. Z. Li; P. G. Martin; S. Molinari; S. Pezzuto; D. Russeil; K. L. J. Rygl; E. Schisano
In order to characterise the cloud structures responsible for the formation of high-mass stars, we present Herschel observations of the DR21 environment. Maps of the column density and dust temperature unveil the structure of the DR21 ridge and several connected filaments. The ridge has column densities larger than 1e23/cm^2 over a region of 2.3 pc^2. It shows substructured column density profiles and branching into two major filaments in the north. The masses in the studied filaments range between 130 and 1400 Msun whereas the mass in the ridge is 15000 Msun. The accretion of these filaments onto the DR21 ridge, suggested by a previous molecular line study, could provide a continuous mass inflow to the ridge. In contrast to the striations seen in e.g., the Taurus region, these filaments are gravitationally unstable and form cores and protostars. These cores formed in the filaments potentially fall into the ridge. Both inflow and collisions of cores could be important to drive the observed high-mass star formation. The evolutionary gradient of star formation running from DR21 in the south to the northern branching is traced by decreasing dust temperature. This evolution and the ridge structure can be explained by two main filamentary components of the ridge that merged first in the south.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2009
L. Deharveng; A. Zavagno; F. Schuller; J. Caplan; M. Pomarès; C. De Breuck
We take advantage of the very simple morphology of RCW 120 -- a perfect bubble -- to understand the mechanisms triggering star formation around an HII region and to establish what kind of stars are formed there. We present 870 microns observations of RCW 120, obtained with the APEX-LABOCA camera. These show the distribution of cold dust, and thus of neutral material. We use Spitzer-MIPS observations at 24 and 70 microns to detect the young stellar objects (YSOs) present in this region and to estimate their evolutionary stages. A layer of dense neutral material surrounds the HII region, having been swept up during the regions expansion. This layer has a mass greater than 2000 solar masses and is fragmented, with massive fragments elongated along the ionization front (IF). We measured the 24 microns flux of 138 sources. Of these, 39 are Class I or flat-spectrum YSOs observed in the direction of the collected layer. We show that several triggering mechanisms are acting simultaneously in the swept-up shell, where they form a second generation of stars. No massive YSOs are detected. However, a massive, compact 870 microns core lies adjacent to the IF. A 70 microns source with no 24 microns counterpart is detected at the same position. This source is a likely candidate for a Class 0 YSO. Also at 24 microns, we detect a chain of about ten regularly spaced Class I or flat spectrum sources, parallel to the IF, in the direction of the most massive fragment. We suggest that the formation of these YSOs is the result of Jeans gravitational instabilities in the collected layer. Finally, the 870 microns emission, the 24 microns emission, and the Halpha emission show the existence of an extended and partially ionized photodissociation region around RCW 120.