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Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2001

The Arcetri Catalog of H2O maser sources: Update 2000

R. Valdettaro; F. Palla; J. Brand; R. Cesaroni; G. Comoretto; S. Di Franco; Marcello Felli; E. Natale; F. Palagi; D. Panella; G. Tofani

We present a second update of the Arcetri Catalog of water masers (Comoretto et al. [CITE]; Brand et al. [CITE]). The present study reports the results of the observations carried out with the Medicina 32-m radiotelescope from January 1993 to April 2000 on a sample of 300 sources. This compilation consists of newly discovered maser sources that did not appear in the previous Arcetri Catalogs and is made of: a) detections from the literature, and b) unpublished detections obtained with the Medicina antenna. Overall, 83 out of 300 sources were detected. The detection rate is low (28% ) and we attribute this result to the inclusion in our survey of a rather large number of spurious maser detections that have appeared in one particular paper. The observational parameters are reported in tabular form for all the 300 sources and the spectra of the detected masers are presented. We discuss the global properties of the complete Arcetri Catalog based on Comoretto et al. ([CITE]), Brand et al. ([CITE]) and the present observations, which now contains 1013 galactic water maser sources. Of these, 937 have an IRAS counterpart within 1 arcmin from the nominal position of the maser. We establish a classification scheme based on the IRAS flux densities which allows to distinguish between water masers associated with star forming regions and late-type stars. The Arcetri Catalog represents a useful data base for systematic studies of galactic water maser sources.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2007

Water maser variability over 20 years in a large sample of star-forming regions: the complete database

Marcello Felli; J. Brand; R. Cesaroni; C. Codella; G. Comoretto; S. Di Franco; F. Massi; L. Moscadelli; R. Nesti; Luca Olmi; F. Palagi; D. Panella; R. Valdettaro

Context. Water vapor emission at 22 GHz from masers associated with star-forming regions is highly variable. Aims. We present a database of up to 20 years of monitoring of a sample of 43 masers within star-forming regions. The sample covers a large range of luminosities of the associated IRAS source and is representative of the entire population of H2O masers of this type. The database forms a good starting point for any further study of H2O maser variability. Methods. The observations were obtained with the Medicina 32-m radiotelescope, at a rate of 4−5 observations per year. Results. To provide a database that can be easily accessed through the web, we give for each source: plots of the calibrated spectra, the velocity-time-flux density plot, the light curve of the integrated flux, the lower and upper envelopes of the maser emission, the mean spectrum, and the rate of the maser occurrence as a function of velocity. Figures for just one source are given in the text for representative purposes. Figures for all the sources are given in electronic form the appendix. A discussion of the main properties of the H2O variability in our sample will be presented in a forthcoming paper.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2009

Properties of Protostars in the Elephant Trunk in the Globule IC 1396A

William T. Reach; Dohy Faied; Jeonghee Rho; A. C. A. Boogert; Achim Tappe; T. H. Jarrett; Patrick William Morris; Laurent Cambresy; Francesco Palla; R. Valdettaro

Extremely red objects, identified in the early Spitzer Space Telescope observations of the bright-rimmed globule IC 1396A and photometrically classified as Class I protostars and Class II T Tauri stars based on their mid-infrared (mid-IR) colors, were spectroscopically observed at 5.5-38 μm (Spitzer Infrared Spectrograph), at the 22 GHz water maser frequency (National Radio Astronomy Observatory Green Bank Telescope), and in the optical (Palomar Hale 5 m) to confirm their nature and further elucidate their properties. The sources photometrically identified as Class I, including IC 1396A:α, γ, δ, e, and ζ, are confirmed as objects dominated by accretion luminosity from dense envelopes, with accretion rates 1-10 × 10^–6 M☉ yr^–1 and present stellar masses 0.1-2 M☉. The Class I sources have extremely red continua, still rising at 38 μm, with a deep silicate absorption at 9-11 μm, weaker silicate absorption around 18 μm, and weak ice features including CO2 at 15.2 μm and H2O at 6 μm. The ice/silicate absorption ratio in the envelope is exceptionally low for the IC 1396A protostars, compared to those in nearby star-forming regions, suggesting that the envelope chemistry is altered by the radiation field or globule pressure. Only one 22 GHz water maser was detected in IC 1396A; it is coincident with a faint mid-IR source, offset from near the luminous Class I protostar IC 1396A:γ. The maser source, IC 1396A:γb, has luminosity less than 0.1 L☉, the first H2O maser from such a low-luminosity object. Two near-infrared (NIR) H2 knots on opposite sides of IC 1396A:γ reveal a jet, with an axis clearly distinct from the H2O maser of IC 1396A:γb. The objects photometrically classified as Class II, including IC 1396A:β, θ, Two Micron All Sky Survey (2MASS)J 21364964+5722270, 2MASSJ 21362507+5727502, LkHα 349c, Tr 37 11-2146, and Tr 37 11-2037, are confirmed as stars with warm, luminous disks, with a silicate emission feature at 9-11 μm, and bright Hα emission; therefore, they are young, disk-bearing, classical T Tauri stars. The disk properties change significantly with source luminosity: low-mass (G-K) stars have prominent 9-11 emission features due to amorphous silicates while higher-mass (A-F) stars have weaker features requiring abundant crystalline silicates. A mineralogical model that fits the wide- and low-amplitude silicate feature of IC 1396A:θ requires small grains of crystalline olivine (11.3 μm peak) and another material to to explain its 9.1 μm peak; reasonable fits are obtained with a phyllosilicate, quartz, or relatively large (greater than 10 μm) amorphous olivine grains. The distribution of Class I sources is concentrated within the molecular globule, while the Class II sources are more widely scattered. Combined with the spectral results, this suggests two phases of star formation, the first (4 Myr ago) leading to the widespread Class II sources and the central O star of IC 1396 and the second (less than 1 Myr ago) occurring within the globule. The recent phase was likely triggered by the wind and radiation of the central O star of the IC 1396 H II region.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2002

Long-term study of water maser emission associated with young stellar objects - I. The database

R. Valdettaro; Francesco Palla; J. Brand; R. Cesaroni; G. Comoretto; Marcello Felli; F. Palagi

We present the results of more than 10 years of monitoring of the water vapor maser emission in 14 star forming regions obtained with the Medicina 32-m radiotelescope. The sample of objects covers a large range of luminosities of the associated FIR sources. In order to present in a compact and representative way the large amount of data available, we give for each source: a time-velocity-flux density plot, the time dependent integrated flux, the lower and upper envelopes of the maser emission, the frequency of the maser occurrence as a function of velocity, and the mean velocity averaged over the observing period. A brief morphological description of the environment of the maser source is also given. The present data form the basis for a discussion of the main properties of the water vapor maser emission to be presented in a forthcoming paper.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2008

High-Resolution H2O Maser Observations toward IRAS Sources in Bright-Rimmed Clouds

R. Valdettaro; V. Migenes; M. A. Trinidad; J. Brand; Francesco Palla

Bright-rimmed clouds (BRCs) are clouds that have been compressed by an external ionization shock front. We present the first high-resolution VLA observations of 20 of these BRCs in the northern hemisphere. We detected water maser emission from three objects: IRAS 21346+5714 (BRC 36), IRAS 21388+5622 (BRC 37), and IRAS 21445+5712 (BRC 39). The low detection rate supports the evidence that BRCs produce mostly low-luminosity objects, for which maser emission is weak and episodic, and suggests that the embedded sources are in a more advanced evolutionary phase than Class 0 objects.


Astrophysics and Space Science | 2005

Monitoring Water Masers in Star-Forming Regions

J. Brand; R. Cesaroni; G. Comoretto; Marcello Felli; F. Palagi; Francesco Palla; R. Valdettaro

An overview is given of the analysis of more than a decade of H2O maser data from our monitoring program. We find the maser emission to generally depend on the luminosity of the YSO as well as on the geometry of the SFR. There appears to be a threshold luminosity of a few times 104 Lʘ above and below which we find different maser characteristics.


Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union | 2007

A 20-year H 2 O maser monitoring program with the Medicina 32-m telescope

J. Brand; Marcello Felli; R. Cesaroni; C. Codella; G. Comoretto; S. Di Franco; F. Massi; L. Moscadelli; R. Nesti; Luca Olmi; F. Palagi; F. Palla; D. Panella; R. Valdettaro

The Arcetri/Bologna H2O maser group has been monitoring the 1.3-cm water maser emission from a sample of 43 star-forming regions (SFRs) and 22 late-type stars for about 20 years at a sampling rate of 4-5 observations each year, using the 32-m Medicina Radio Telescope (HPBW 1.′9 at 22 GHz). For the late-type stars we observe representative samples of OH/IRstars, Mira’s, semi-regular variables, and supergiants. The SFR-sample spans a large interval in FIR luminosity of the associated Young Stellar Object (YSO), from 20 L to 1.5 ×10 L , and offers a unique data base for the study of the long-term (years) variability of the maser emission in regions of star formation. This presentation concerns only the masers in SFRs. The information obtained from singledish monitoring is complementary to what is extracted from higher-resolution (VLA and VLBI) observations, and can better explore the velocity domain and the long-term variability therein. We characterize the variability of the sources in various ways and we study how it depends on the luminosity and other properties of the associated YSO and its environment.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2003

Long-term study of water masers associated with Young Stellar Objects - II. Analysis

J. Brand; R. Cesaroni; G. Comoretto; Marcello Felli; F. Palagi; Francesco Palla; R. Valdettaro


Proceedings of The International Astronomical Union | 2002

Observations of water maser sources at Arcetri

G. Comoretto; R. Valdettaro; Francesco Palla; J. van. den. Brand; R. Cesaroni; Marcello Felli; Enzo Natale; F. Palagi; Dario Panella; Gianni Tofani


Proceedings of The International Astronomical Union | 2002

Long-term variability of H2O masers in YSOs

R. Valdettaro; Francesco Palla; J. van. den. Brand; R. Cesaroni; G. Comoretto; Marcello Felli; F. Palagi

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