Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where L. Testi is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by L. Testi.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2011

A 100 pc ELLIPTICAL AND TWISTED RING OF COLD AND DENSE MOLECULAR CLOUDS REVEALED BY HERSCHEL AROUND THE GALACTIC CENTER

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 | 2011

Characterizing precursors to stellar clusters with Herschel

Cara Battersby; John Bally; Adam Ginsburg; J.-P. Bernard; Christopher M. Brunt; G. A. Fuller; Peter G. Martin; S. Molinari; J. C. Mottram; Nicolas Peretto; L. Testi; M. A. Thompson

Context. Despite their profound effect on the universe, the formation of massive stars and stellar clusters remains elusive. Recent advances in observing facilities and computing power have brought us closer to understanding this formation process. In the past decade, compelling evidence has emerged that suggests infrared dark clouds (IRDCs) may be precursors to stellar clusters. However, the usual method for identifying IRDCs is biased by the requirement that they are seen in absorption against background mid-IR emission, whereas dust continuum observations allow cold, dense pre-stellar-clusters to be identified anywhere. n nAims. We aim to understand what dust temperatures and column densities characterize and distinguish IRDCs, to explore the population of dust continuum sources that are not IRDCs, and to roughly characterize the level of star formation activity in these dust continuum sources. n nMethods. We use Hi-GAL 70 to 500 μm data to identify dust continuum sources in the l = 30° and l = 59° Hi-GAL science demonstration phase (SDP) fields, to characterize and subtract the Galactic cirrus emission, and perform pixel-by-pixel modified blackbody fits on cirrus-subtracted Hi-GAL sources. We utilize archival Spitzer data to indicate the level of star-forming activity in each pixel, from mid-IR-dark to mid-IR-bright. n nResults. We present temperature and column density maps in the Hi-GAL l = 30° and l = 59° SDP fields, as well as a robust algorithm for cirrus subtraction and source identification using Hi-GAL data. We report on the fraction of Hi-GAL source pixels which are mid-IR-dark, mid-IR-neutral, or mid-IR-bright in both fields. We find significant trends in column density and temperature between mid-IR-dark and mid-IR-bright pixels; mid-IR-dark pixels are about 10 K colder and have a factor of 2 higher column density on average than mid-IR-bright pixels. We find that Hi-GAL dust continuum sources span a range of evolutionary states from pre- to star-forming, and that warmer sources are associated with more star formation tracers. Additionally, there is a trend of increasing temperature with tracer type from mid-IR-dark at the coldest, to outflow/maser sources in the middle, and finally to 8 and 24 μm bright sources at the warmest. Finally, we identify five candidate IRDC-like sources on the far-side of the Galaxy. These are cold (~20 K), high column density (N(H2) > 1022 cm-2) clouds identified with Hi-GAL which, despite bright surrounding mid-IR emission, show little to no absorption at 8 μm. These are the first inner Galaxy far-side candidate IRDCs of which the authors are aware.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2010

A Herschel study of YSO evolutionary stages and formation timelines in two fields of the Hi-GAL survey

D. Elia; E. Schisano; S. Molinari; Thomas P. Robitaille; Daniel Anglés-Alcázar; John Bally; Cara Battersby; M. Benedettini; N. Billot; L. Calzoletti; A. M. di Giorgio; F. Faustini; J. Z. Li; P. Martin; Larry Morgan; F. Motte; J. C. Mottram; P. Natoli; Luca Olmi; R. Paladini; F. Piacentini; M. Pestalozzi; S. Pezzuto; D. Polychroni; M. D. Smith; F. Strafella; Guy S. Stringfellow; L. Testi; M. A. Thompson; A. Traficante

We present a first study of the star-forming compact dust condensations revealed by Herschel in the two 2° × 2° Galactic Plane fields centered at [l, b] = [30°, 0°] and [l, b] =[59°, 0°] , respectively, and observed during the science demonstration phase for the Herschel Infrared GALactic plane survey (Hi-GAL) key-project. Compact source catalogs extracted for the two fields in the five Hi-GAL bands (70, 160, 250, 350 and 500 μm) were merged based on simple criteria of positional association and spectral energy distribution (SED) consistency into a final catalog which contains only coherent SEDs with counterparts in at least three adjacent Herschel bands. These final source lists contain 528 entries for the l = 30° field, and 444 entries for the = 59° field. The SED coverage has been augmented with ancillary data at 24 μmu2000and 1.1 mm. SED modeling for the subset of 318 and 101 sources (in the two fields, respectively) for which the distance is known was carried out using both a structured star/disk/envelope radiative transfer model and a simple isothermal grey-body. Global parameters like mass, luminosity, temperature and dust properties have been estimated. The L_(bol)/M_(env) ratio spans four orders of magnitudes from values compatible with the pre-protostellar phase to embedded massive zero-age main sequence stars. Sources in the l = 59° field have on average lower L/M, possibly outlining an overall earlier evolutionary stage with respect to the sources in the l = 30° field. Many of these cores are actively forming high-mass stars, although the estimated core surface densities appear to be an order of magnitude below the 1 g cm^(-2) critical threshold for high-mass star formation.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016

Molecular gas kinematics within the central 250 pc of the Milky Way

J. D. Henshaw; S. N. Longmore; J. M. D. Kruijssen; Ben Davies; John Bally; A. T. Barnes; Cara Battersby; Michael G. Burton; Maria Cunningham; James E. Dale; Adam Ginsburg; K. Immer; Paul Jones; Sarah Kendrew; Elisabeth A. C. Mills; S. Molinari; T. J. T. Moore; Jürgen Ott; Thushara Pillai; Jill Rathborne; P. Schilke; A. Schmiedeke; L. Testi; Daniel Walker; Andrew J. Walsh; Qizhou Zhang

Using spectral-line observations of HNCO, N2H+, and HNC, we investigate the kinematics of dense gas in the central ~250 pc of the Galaxy. We present SCOUSE (Semi-automated multi-COmponent Universal Spectral-line fitting Engine), a line fitting algorithm designed to analyse large volumes of spectral-line data efficiently and systematically. Unlike techniques which do not account for complex line profiles, SCOUSE accurately describes the {l, b, v_LSR} distribution of CMZ gas, which is asymmetric about Sgr A* in both position and velocity. Velocity dispersions range from 2.6 km/s 28. The gas is distributed throughout several streams, with projected lengths ~100-250 pc. We link the streams to individual clouds and sub-regions, including Sgr C, the 20 and 50 km/s clouds, the dust ridge, and Sgr B2. Shell-like emission features can be explained by the projection of independent molecular clouds in Sgr C and the newly identified conical profile of Sgr B2 in {l ,b, v_LSR} space. These features have previously invoked supernova-driven shells and cloud-cloud collisions as explanations. We instead caution against structure identification in velocity-integrated emission maps. Three geometries describing the 3-D structure of the CMZ are investigated: i) two spiral arms; ii) a closed elliptical orbit; iii) an open stream. While two spiral arms and an open stream qualitatively reproduce the gas distribution, the most recent parameterisation of the closed elliptical orbit does not. Finally, we discuss how proper motion measurements of masers can distinguish between these geometries, and suggest that this effort should be focused on the 20 km/s and 50 km/s clouds and Sgr C.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016

Dense gas in the Galactic central molecular zone is warm and heated by turbulence

Adam Ginsburg; C. Henkel; Yiping Ao; D. Riquelme; Jens Kauffmann; Thushara Pillai; Elisabeth A. C. Mills; M. A. Requena-Torres; K. Immer; L. Testi; Juergen Ott; John Bally; Cara Battersby; Jeremy Darling; Susanne Aalto; Thomas Stanke; Sarah Kendrew; J. M. Diederik Kruijssen; S. N. Longmore; James E. Dale; Rolf Guesten; K. M. Menten

Context. The Galactic center is the closest region where we can study star formation under extreme physical conditions like those in high-redshift galaxies. Aims. We measure the temperature of the dense gas in the central molecular zone (CMZ) and examine what drives it. Methods. We mapped the inner 300 pc of the CMZ in the temperature-sensitive J = 3-2 para-formaldehyde (p-H2CO) transitions. We used the 3(2,1)-2(2,0)/3(0,3)-2(0,2) line ratio to determine the gas temperature in n similar to 10(4) - 10(5) cm(-3) gas. We have produced temperature maps and cubes with 30 0 0 and 1 km s(-1) resolution and published all data in FITS form. Results. Dense gas temperatures in the Galactic center range from similar to 60 K to > 100 K in selected regions. The highest gas temperatures T-G > 100 K are observed around the Sgr B2 cores, in the extended Sgr B2 cloud, the 20 km s(-1) and 50 km s(-1) clouds, and in The Brick (G0.253 + 0.016). We infer an upper limit on the cosmic ray ionization rate zeta(CR) < 10(-14) s(-1). Conclusions. The dense molecular gas temperature of the region around our Galactic center is similar to values found in the central regions of other galaxies, in particular starburst systems. The gas temperature is uniformly higher than the dust temperature, confirming that dust is a coolant in the dense gas. Turbulent heating can readily explain the observed temperatures given the observed line widths. Cosmic rays cannot explain the observed variation in gas temperatures, so CMZ dense gas temperatures are not dominated by cosmic ray heating. The gas temperatures previously observed to be high in the inner similar to 75 pc are confirmed to be high in the entire CMZ.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2013

On the shape of the mass-function of dense clumps in the Hi-GAL fields - I. Spectral energy distribution determination and global properties of the mass-functions

Luca Olmi; Daniel Anglés-Alcázar; D. Elia; S. Molinari; Ludovic Montier; M. Pestalozzi; S. Pezzuto; D. Polychroni; I. Ristorcelli; J. A. Rodón; E. Schisano; Michael D. Smith; L. Testi; M. A. Thompson

Context. Stars form in dense, dusty clumps of molecular clouds, but little is known about their origin and evolution. In particular, the relationship between the mass distribution of these clumps (also known as the clump mass function or CMF) and the stellar initial mass function (IMF), is still poorly understood. Aims. To discern the “true” shape of the CMF and to better understand how the CMF may evolve toward the IMF, large samples of bona-fide pre- and proto-stellar clumps are required. The sensitive observations of the Herschel Space Observatory (HSO) are now allowing us to look at large clump populations in various clouds with different physical conditions. Methods. We analyze two fields in the Galactic plane mapped by HSO during its science demonstration phase (SDP), as part of the more complete and unbiased Herschel infrared GALactic Plane Survey (Hi-GAL). These fields underwent a source-extraction and flux-estimation pipeline, which allowed us to obtain a sample with thousands of clumps. Starless and proto-stellar clumps were separated using both color and positional criteria to find those coincident with MIPS 24 mu m sources. We describe the probability density functions of the power-law and lognormal models that were used to fit the CMFs. For the lognormal model we applied several statistical techniques to the data and compared their results. Results. The CMFs of the two SDP fields show very similar shapes, but very different mass scales. This similarity is confirmed by the values of the best-fit parameters of either the power-law or lognormal model. The power-law model leads to almost identical CMF slopes, whereas the lognormal model shows that the CMFs have similar widths. Conclusions. The similar CMF shape but different mass scale represents an evidence that the overall process of star formation in the two regions is very different. When comparing with the IMF, we find that the width of the IMF is narrower than the measured widths of the CMF in the two SDP fields. This may suggest that an additional mass selection occurs in later stages of gravitational collapse.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2013

A Hi-GAL study of the high-mass star-forming region G29.96–0.02

M. T. Beltrán; Luca Olmi; R. Cesaroni; E. Schisano; D. Elia; S. Molinari; A. M. di Giorgio; Jason Matthew Kirk; J. C. Mottram; M. Pestalozzi; L. Testi; M. A. Thompson

Context. G29.96-0.02 is a high-mass star-forming cloud observed at 70, 160, 250, 350, and 500 {


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

Cloud Structure of Galactic OB Cluster Forming Regions from Combining Ground and Space Based Bolometric Observations

Yuxin Lin; Hauyu Baobab Liu; Di Li; Zhi-Yu Zhang; Adam Ginsburg; Jaime E. Pineda; Lei Qian; Roberto Galván-Madrid; Anna F. McLeod; Erik Rosolowsky; James E. Dale; K. Immer; Eric Koch; Steve Longmore; Daniel Walker; L. Testi

μ


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2015

Infrared emission of young HII regions: a Herschel/Hi-GAL study

R. Cesaroni; M. Pestalozzi; M. T. Beltrán; Michael G. Hoare; S. Molinari; Luca Olmi; Michael D. Smith; Guy S. Stringfellow; L. Testi; M. A. Thompson

}m as part of the Herschel survey of the Galactic plane (Hi-GAL) during the science demonstration phase.n Aims: We wish to conduct a far-infrared study of the sources associated with this star-forming region by estimating their physical properties and evolutionary stage, and investigating the clump mass function, the star formation efficiency and rate in the cloud.n Methods: We have identified the Hi-GAL sources associated with the cloud, searched for possible counterparts at centimeter and infrared wavelengths, fitted their spectral energy distribution and estimated their physical parameters.n Results: A total of 198 sources have been detected in all 5 Hi-GAL bands, 117 of which are associated with 24 {


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2014

Old pre-main-sequence stars - Disc reformation by Bondi-Hoyle accretion

Peter Scicluna; G. Rosotti; James E. Dale; L. Testi

μ

Collaboration


Dive into the L. Testi's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M. A. Thompson

University of Hertfordshire

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John Bally

University of Colorado Boulder

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

James E. Dale

University of Hertfordshire

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Adam Ginsburg

European Southern Observatory

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge