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Dive into the research topics where Sarolta Zahorecz is active.

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Featured researches published by Sarolta Zahorecz.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2012

Galactic cold cores - III. General cloud properties

M. Juvela; I. Ristorcelli; L. Pagani; Yasuo Doi; V.-M. Pelkonen; D. J. Marshall; J.-P. Bernard; E. Falgarone; J. Malinen; G. Marton; P. McGehee; L. Montier; F. Motte; R. Paladini; L. V. Tóth; N. Ysard; Sarolta Zahorecz; A. Zavagno

Context. In the project galactic cold cores we are carrying out Herschel photometric observations of cold regions of the interstellar clouds as previously identified with the Planck satellite. The aim of the project is to derive the physical properties of the population of cold clumps and to study its connection to ongoing and future star formation. Aims. We examine the cloud structure around the Planck detections in 71 fields observed with the Herschel SPIRE instrument by the summer of 2011. We wish to determine the general physical characteristics of the fields and to examine the morphology of the clouds where the cold high column density clumps are found. Methods. Using the Herschel SPIRE data, we derive colour temperature and column density maps of the fields. Together with ancillary data, we examine the infrared spectral energy distributions of the main clumps. The clouds are categorised according to their large scale morphology. With the help of recently released WISE satellite data, we look for signs of enhanced mid-infrared scattering (”coreshine”), an indication of growth of the dust grains, and have a first look at the star formation activity associated with the cold clumps. Results. The mapped clouds have distances ranging from similar to 100 pc to several kiloparsecs and cover a range of sizes and masses from cores of less than 10 M-circle dot to clouds with masses in excess of 10 000 M-circle dot. Most fields contain some filamentary structures and in about half of the cases a filament or a few filaments dominate the morphology. In one case out of ten, the clouds show a cometary shape or have sharp boundaries indicative of compression by an external force. The width of the filaments is typically similar to 0.2-0.3 pc. However, there is significant variation from 0.1 pc to 1 pc and the estimates are sensitive to the methods used and the very definition of a filament. Enhanced mid-infrared scattering, coreshine, was detected in four clouds with six additional tentative detections. The cloud LDN183 is included in our sample and remains the best example of this phenomenon. About half of the fields are associated with active star formation as indicated by the presence of mid-infrared point sources. The mid-infrared sources often coincide with structures whose sub-millimetre spectra are still dominated by the cold dust.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016

An all-sky support vector machine selection of WISE YSO candidates

G. Marton; L. V. Tóth; R. Paladini; M. Kun; Sarolta Zahorecz; P. McGehee; C.-S. Kiss

We explored the AllWISE catalogue of the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer mission and identified Young Stellar Object candidates. Reliable 2MASS and WISE photometric data combined with Planck dust opacity values were used to build our dataset and to find the best classification scheme. A sophisticated statistical method, the Support Vector Machine (SVM) is used to analyse the multi-dimensional data space and to remove source types identified as contaminants (extragalactic sources, main sequence stars, evolved stars and sources related to the interstellar medium). Objects listed in the SIMBAD database are used to identify the already known sources and to train our method. A new all-sky selection of 133,980 Class I/II YSO candidates is presented. The estimated contamination was found to be well below 1% based on comparison with our SIMBAD training set. We also compare our results to that of existing methods and catalogues. The SVM selection process successfully identified >90% of the Class I/II YSOs based on comparison with photometric and spectroscopic YSO catalogues. Our conclusion is that by using the SVM, our classification is able to identify more known YSOs of the training sample than other methods based on colour-colour and magnitude-colour selection. The distribution of the YSO candidates well correlates with that of the Planck Galactic Cold Clumps in the Taurus–Auriga–Perseus–California region.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2015

Galactic cold cores - IV. Cold submillimetre sources: catalogue and statistical analysis

J. Montillaud; M. Juvela; A. Rivera-Ingraham; J. Malinen; V.-M. Pelkonen; I. Ristorcelli; L. Montier; D. J. Marshall; G. Marton; L. Pagani; L. V. Tóth; Sarolta Zahorecz; N. Ysard; P. McGehee; R. Paladini; E. Falgarone; J.-P. Bernard; F. Motte; A. Zavagno; Yasuo Doi

Context. For the project Galactic cold cores, Herschel photometric observations were carried out as a follow-up of cold regions of interstellar clouds previously identified with the Planck satellite. The aim of the project is to derive the physical properties of the population of cold sources and to study its connection to ongoing and future star formation. Aims. We build a catalogue of cold sources within the clouds in 116 fields observed with the Herschel PACS and SPIRE instruments. We wish to determine the general physical characteristics of the cold sources and to examine the correlations with their host cloud properties. Methods. From Herschel data, we computed colour temperature and column density maps of the fields. We estimated the distance to the target clouds and provide both uncertainties and reliability flags for the distances. The getsources multiwavelength source extraction algorithm was employed to build a catalogue of several thousand cold sources. Mid-infrared data were used, along with colour and position criteria, to separate starless and protostellar sources. We also propose another classification method based on submillimetre temperature profiles. We analysed the statistical distributions of the physical properties of the source samples. Results. We provide a catalogue of ~4000 cold sources within or near star forming clouds, most of which are located either in nearby molecular complexes (≲1 kpc) or in star forming regions of the nearby galactic arms (~2 kpc). About 70% of the sources have a size compatible with an individual core, and 35% of those sources are likely to be gravitationally bound. Significant statistical differences in physical properties are found between starless and protostellar sources, in column density versus dust temperature, mass versus size, and mass versus dust temperature diagrams. The core mass functions are very similar to those previously reported for other regions. On statistical grounds we find that gravitationally bound sources have higher background column densities (median N_(bg)(H_2) ~ 5 × 10^(21) cm^(-2)) than unbound sources (median N_(bg)(H_2) ~ 3 × 10^(21) cm^(-2)). These values of N_(bg)(H_2) are higher for higher dust temperatures of the external layers of the parent cloud. However, only in a few cases do we find clear N_(bg)(H_2) thresholds for the presence of cores. The dust temperatures of cloud external layers show clear variations with galactic location, as may the source temperatures. Conclusions. Our data support a more complex view of star formation than in the simple idea of a column density threshold. They show a clear influence of the surrounding UV-visible radiation on how cores distribute in their host clouds with possible variations on the Galactic scale.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2014

Multiwavelength study of the high-latitude cloud L1642: chain of star formation

Johanna Malinen; M. Juvela; Sarolta Zahorecz; A. Rivera-Ingraham; J. Montillaud; Ko Arimatsu; J.-Ph. Bernard; Yasuo Doi; L. K. Haikala; R. Kawabe; G. Marton; P. McGehee; V.-M. Pelkonen; I. Ristorcelli; Yoshito Shimajiri; Satoshi Takita; L. V. Tóth; Takashi Tsukagoshi; N. Ysard

Context. L1642 is one of the two high galactic latitude (|b| > 30°) clouds confirmed to have active star formation. Aims. We examine the properties of this cloud, especially the large-scale structure, dust properties, and compact sources at different stages of star formation. Methods. We present high-resolution far-infrared and submillimetre observations with the Herschel and AKARI satellites and millimetre observations with the AzTEC/ASTE telescope, which we combined with archive data from near- and mid-infrared (2MASS, WISE) to millimetre wavelength observations (Planck). Results. The Herschel observations, combined with other data, show a sequence of objects from a cold clump to young stellar objects (YSOs) at different evolutionary stages. Source B-3 (2MASS J04351455-1414468) appears to be a YSO forming inside the L1642 cloud, instead of a foreground brown dwarf, as previously classified. Herschel data reveal striation in the diffuse dust emission around the cloud L1642. The western region shows striation towards the NE and has a steeper column density gradient on its southern side. The densest central region has a bow-shock like structure showing compression from the west and has a filamentary tail extending towards the east. The differences suggest that these may be spatially distinct structures, aligned only in projection. We derive values of the dust emission cross-section per H nucleon of σ_e(250 μm) = 0.5−1.5 × 10^(-25) cm^2/H for different regions of the cloud. Modified black-body fits to the spectral energy distribution of Herschel and Planck data give emissivity spectral index β values 1.8–2.0 for the different regions. The compact sources have lower β values and show an anticorrelation between T and β. Conclusions. Markov chain Monte Carlo calculations demonstrate the strong anticorrelation between β and T errors and the importance of millimetre wavelength Planck data in constraining the estimates. L1642 reveals a more complex structure and sequence of star formation than previously known.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2017

Gas versus solid-phase deuterated chemistry: HDCO and D2CO in massive star-forming regions

Sarolta Zahorecz; Izaskun Jimenez-Serra; L. Testi; K. Immer; F. Fontani; P. Caselli; Ke Wang; L. V. Tóth

The formation of deuterated molecules is favoured at low temperatures and high densities. Therefore, the deuteration fraction D


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016

Physical Properties of Galactic Planck Cold Cores revealed by the Hi-GAL survey

Sarolta Zahorecz; I. Jiménez-Serra; Ke Wang; L. Testi; L. V. Tóth; S. Molinari

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The Astrophysical Journal | 2017

ALMA Observations of N83C in the Early Stage of Star Formation in the Small Magellanic Cloud

Kazuyuki Muraoka; Aya Homma; Toshikazu Onishi; Kazuki Tokuda; Ryohei Harada; Yuuki Morioka; Sarolta Zahorecz; Kazuya Saigo; Akiko Kawamura; Norikazu Mizuno; Tetsuhiro Minamidani; Erik Muller; Yasuo Fukui; Margaret Meixner; Remy Indebetouw; Marta Malgorzata Sewilo; Alberto D. Bolatto

is expected to be enhanced in cold, dense prestellar cores and to decrease after protostellar birth. Previous studies have shown that the deuterated forms of species such as N2H+ (formed in the gas phase) and CH3OH (formed on grain surfaces) can be used as evolutionary indicators and to constrain their dominant formation processes and time-scales. Formaldehyde (H2CO) and its deuterated forms can be produced both in the gas phase and on grain surfaces. However, the relative importance of these two chemical pathways is unclear. Comparison of the deuteration fraction of H2CO with respect to that of N2H+, NH3 and CH3OH can help us to understand its formation processes and time-scales. With the new SEPIA Band 5 receiver on APEX, we have observed the J=3-2 rotational lines of HDCO and D2CO at 193 GHz and 175 GHz toward three massive star forming regions hosting objects at different evolutionary stages: two High-mass Starless Cores (HMSC), two High-mass Protostellar Objects (HMPOs), and one Ultracompact HII region (UCHII). By using previously obtained H2CO J=3-2 data, the deuteration fractions HDCO/H2CO and D2CO/HDCO are estimated. Our observations show that singly-deuterated H2CO is detected toward all sources and that the deuteration fraction of H2CO increases from the HMSC to the HMPO phase and then sharply decreases in the latest evolutionary stage (UCHII). The doubly-deuterated form of H2CO is detected only in the earlier evolutionary stages with D2CO/H2CO showing a pattern that is qualitatively consistent with that of HDCO/H2CO, within current uncertainties. Our initial results show that H2CO may display a similar D


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2017

A CO survey on a sample of Herschel cold clumps

O. Fehér; M. Juvela; T. Lunttila; J. Montillaud; I. Ristorcelli; Sarolta Zahorecz; L. V. Tóth

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Archive | 2012

YSO Clusters on Galactic Infrared Loops

G. Marton; Zoltan Kiss; L. Viktor Tóth; Sarolta Zahorecz; László Pásztor; Munateka Ueno; Yoshimi Kitamura; Motohide Tamura; Akiko Kawamura; Toshikazu Onishi

pattern as that of CH3OH in massive young stellar objects. This finding suggests that solid state reactions dominate its formation.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2018

The Detection of Hot Cores and Complex Organic Molecules in the Large Magellanic Cloud

Marta Malgorzata Sewilo; Remy Indebetouw; Steven B. Charnley; Sarolta Zahorecz; J. M. Oliveira; Jacco Th. van Loon; Jacob L. Ward; C.-H. Rosie Chen; Jennifer Janean Wiseman; Yasuo Fukui; Akiko Kawamura; Margaret M. Meixner; Toshikazu Onishi; P. Schilke

Previous studies of the initial conditions of massive star formation have mainly targeted Infrared-Dark Clouds (IRDCs) toward the inner Galaxy. This is due to the fact that IRDCs were first detected in absorption against the bright mid-IR background, requiring a favourable location to be observed. By selection, IRDCs represent only a fraction of the Galactic clouds capable of forming massive stars and star clusters. Due to their low dust temperatures, IRDCs are bright in the far-IR and millimeter and thus, observations at these wavelengths have the potential to provide a complete sample of star-forming massive clouds across the Galaxy. Our aim is to identify the clouds at the initial conditions of massive star formation across the Galaxy and compare their physical properties as a function of their Galactic location. We have examined the physical properties of a homogeneous galactic cold core sample obtained with the Planck satellite across the Galactic Plane. With the use of Herschel Hi-GAL observations, we have characterized the internal structure of them. By using background-subtracted Herschel images, we have derived the H2 column density and dust temperature maps for 48 Planck clumps. Their basic physical parameters have been calculated and analyzed as a function of location within the Galaxy. These properties have also been compared with the empirical relation for massive star formation derived by Kauffmann & Pillai (2010). Most of the Planck clumps contain signs of star formation. About 25% of them are massive enough to form high mass stars. Planck clumps toward the Galactic center region show higher peak column densities and higher average dust temperatures than those of the clumps in the outer Galaxy. Although we only have seven clumps without associated YSOs, the Hi-GAL data show no apparent differences in the properties of Planck cold clumps with and without star formation.

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G. Marton

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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L. Viktor Tóth

Eötvös Loránd University

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L. V. Tóth

Eötvös Loránd University

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Toshikazu Onishi

Osaka Prefecture University

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István Rácz

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Munetaka Ueno

Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency

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Yoshimi Kitamura

Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency

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