IRC+10216's Innermost Envelope -- The eSMA's View
Abstract
We used the Extended Submillimeter Array (eSMA) in its most extended configuration to investigate the innermost (within a radius of 290 R* from the star) circumstellar envelope (CSE) of IRC+10216. We imaged the CSE using HCN and other molecular lines with a beam size of 0."22 x 0."46, deeply into the very inner edge (15 R*) of the envelope where the expansion velocity is only 3 km/s. The excitation mechanism of hot HCN and KCl maser lines is discussed. HCN maser components are spatially resolved for the first time on an astronomical object. We identified two discrete regions in the envelope: a region with a radius of . 15 R*, where molecular species have just formed and the gas has begun to be accelerated (region I) and a shell region (region II) with a radius of 23 R* and a thickness of 15 R*, whose expansion velocity has reached up to 13 km/s, nearly the terminal velocity of 15 km/s. The SiS line detected in region I shows a large expansion velocity of 16 km/s due to strong wing components, indicating that the emission may arise from a shock region in the innermost envelope. In region II, the P.A. of the most copious mass loss direction was found to be 120 +/- 10 degrees, which may correspond to the equatorial direction of the star. Region II contains a torus-like feature. These two regions may have emerged due to significant differences in the size distributions of the dust particles in the two regions.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0904.0280,
title = {IRC+10216's Innermost Envelope -- The eSMA's View},
author = {Hiroko Shinnaga and Ken H. Young and Remo P. J. Tilanus and Richard Chamberlin and Mark A. Gurwell and David Wilner and A. Meredith Hughes and Hiroshige Yoshida and Ruisheng Peng and Brian Force and Per Friberg and Sandrine Bottinelli and Ewine F. Van Dishoeck and Thomas G. Phillips},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0904.0280},
year = {2011}
}
Comments
26 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal. Please find the pdf at http://www.submm.caltech.edu/~hs/astroph/0904.0280.pdf and the ps file at http://www.submm.caltech.edu/~hs/astroph/0904.0280.ps