- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/651/L125
- Title:
- Water masers associated with IR dark cloud cores
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/651/L125
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present a survey of the 6_16_-5_23_ H_2_O maser transition toward a sample of 140 compact cores in infrared dark clouds using the Very Large Array. Strong (>1Jy) H_2_O maser emission was found associated with 17 cores, indicative of star formation in these cores. We infer that the cores with H2O masers have embedded protostars. Cores associated with maser emission have masses of 12 to 2x10^3^M_{sun}_, similar to the mass range in the entire sample. The H_2_O maser detection rate (12%) toward the compact, cold cores is much lower than that toward high-mass protostellar objects and ultracompact H ii regions. The detection rate of H_2_O masers is significantly higher for higher mass cores than for lower mass cores. We suggest that some of the most massive infrared dark cloud cores without H_2_O maser emission are at an evolutionary stage earlier than the protostellar phases. They are prime candidates for high-mass starless cores.
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- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/826/136
- Title:
- Water masers in M31. II. Multiwavelength data
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/826/136
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present a comparative multiwavelength analysis of water-maser-emitting regions and non-maser-emitting luminous 24{mu}m star-forming regions in the Andromeda Galaxy (M31) to identify the sites most likely to produce luminous water masers useful for astrometry and proper motion studies. Included in the analysis are Spitzer 24{mu}m photometry, Herschel 70 and 160{mu}m photometry, H{alpha} emission, dust temperature, and star-formation rate. We find significant differences between the maser-emitting and non-maser-emitting regions: water-maser-emitting regions tend to be more infrared-luminous and show higher star-formation rates. The five water masers in M31 are consistent with being analogs of water masers in Galactic star-forming regions and represent the high-luminosity tail of a larger (and as yet undetected) population. Most regions likely to produce water masers bright enough for proper motion measurements using current facilities have already been surveyed, but we suggest three ways to detect additional water masers in M31: (1) reobserve the most luminous mid- or far-infrared sources with higher sensitivity than was used in the Green Bank Telescope survey; (2) observe early-stage star-forming regions selected by millimeter continuum that have not already been selected by their 24{mu}m emission, and (3) reobserve the most luminous mid- or far-infrared sources and rely on maser variability for new detections.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/826/24
- Title:
- Water masers in M31. I. Recombination lines
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/826/24
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We report the results of a Green Bank Telescope survey for water masers, ammonia (1,1) and (2,2), and the H66{alpha} recombination line toward 506 luminous compact 24{mu}m emitting regions in the Andromeda Galaxy (M31). We include the 206 sources observed in the Darling water maser survey for completeness. The survey was sensitive enough to detect any maser useful for ~10{mu}as/yr astrometry. No new water masers, ammonia lines, or H66{alpha} recombination lines were detected individually or in spectral stacks reaching rms noise levels of ~3mJy and ~0.2mJy, respectively, in 3.1-3.3km/s channels. The lack of detections in individual spectra and in the spectral stacks is consistent with Galactic extrapolations. Contrary to previous assertions, there do not seem to be any additional bright water masers to be found in M31. The strong variability of water masers may enable new maser detections in the future, but variability may also limit the astrometric utility of known (or future) masers because flaring masers must also fade.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/493/940
- Title:
- Water masers in Orion
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/493/940
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- Measurements of the 6_16_ -> 5_23_ line of H_2_O at 1.3cm in the Orion region of star formation are reported. With a spatial resolution of ~0.1", H_2_O maser emission was detected in two regions: Orion BN/KL and Orion S. The well-known masers in the BN/KL region are distributed in a 30"x30" area. The "shell" masers, within the BN/KL region, are distributed in a 2" by 0.5" strip centered on radio source I and are offset from IRc2.
215. Water maser survey
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/AJ/132/1322
- Title:
- Water maser survey
- Short Name:
- J/AJ/132/1322
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We report on the most sensitive water maser survey toward Bok globules to date, performed using NASA's 70m antenna at Robledo de Chavela (Spain). We observed 207 positions within the Clemens and Barvainis catalog with a higher probability of harboring a young star, using as selection criteria the presence of radio continuum emission (from submillimeter to centimeter wavelengths), geometric centers of molecular outflows, peaks in maps of high-density gas tracers (NH3 or CS), and IRAS point sources. We have obtained seven maser detections, six of which (in CB 34, CB 54, CB 65, CB 101, CB 199, and CB 232) are reported for the first time here. Most of the water masers we detected are likely to be associated with young stellar objects (YSOs), except for CB 101 (probably an evolved object) and CB 65 (uncertain nature). The water maser in CB 199 shows a relatively high shift (30km/s) of its velocity centroid with respect to the cloud velocity, which is unusual for low-mass YSOs. We speculate that high-velocity masers in this kind of object could be related to episodes of energetic mass loss in close binaries. Alternatively, the maser in CB 199 could be pumped by a protoplanetary or a young planetary nebula. CB 232 is the smallest Bok globule (0.6pc) known to be associated with water maser emission, although it would be superseded by the cases of CB 65 (0.3pc) and CB 199 (0.5pc) if their association with YSOs is confirmed. All our selection criteria have statistically compatible detection rates, except for IRAS sources, which tend to be somewhat worse predictors for the presence of maser emission.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/PASJ/53/517
- Title:
- Water maser survey of late-type stars
- Short Name:
- J/PASJ/53/517
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- This paper presents new results of a water maser survey of late-type stellar objects at 22.235GHz with the Kashima 34-m radio telescope. We have detected 179 out of 643 observed sources, including 32 new detections. The sources were selected in terms of the IRAS flux density and colors of late-type stars, involving optically observable Mira/semi-regular variables, IRC objects, OH/IR sources and proto-planetary nebulae. We found the highest H_2_O detection rate for the type of stars with a thin dust envelope (Mira/semi-regular variables) among other types of sources. This is attributed to the smaller distances to such stars in the sample. The velocity spread of the H_2_O maser profile has an increasing tendency with the IRAS color, though it becomes more difficult to access this color dependence beyond an edge of the transition of the (oxygen-rich) Asymptotic Giant Branch stars to protoplanetary nebulae in the two-color diagram.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/434/613
- Title:
- Water maser survey of methanol maser sources
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/434/613
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- High sensitivity observations of the 22GHz water maser emission have been carried out with the Effelsberg 100m radio telescope. The observed sample was 79 candidate high-mass protostellar objects from a flux-limited sample of 6.7GHz methanol sources (Szymczak et al., 2002A&A...392..277S). Water maser emission was found in 41 sources of which 28 were not previously catalogued.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/393/149
- Title:
- W49N H2O maser outflow: distance and kinematics
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/393/149
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- Study of the motions of 105 H2O maser features clustered around a newly formed star in W49N yields the kinematics of the gas flow, the distance to the source, and the spatial scale of the Milky Way. We find that the maser outflow is bipolar, with an opening angle of ~60deg and an inclination of ~40deg to the line of sight. The expansion has a constant velocity of ~18 km/s out to a radius of 0.1pc, beyond which the outflow velocity increases to greater than 200 km/s. This increase may be due to interaction with ambient material. A rotation is also present; this rotation is nearly perpendicular to the outflow axis. The rotation may be due to ram pressure from ambient material; rotation of the ring of H II regions described by Welch et al. could produce such nonradial motion. Comparison of Doppler velocities and proper motions yields a distance of 11.4+/-1.2 kpc for the maser cluster. Combining this with a kinematic distance for W49N from Galactic rotation, we obtain a value of R0, the distance to the Galactic center, of 8.1+/-1.1 kpc.
219. W49N H2O masers
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/429/253
- Title:
- W49N H2O masers
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/429/253
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- VLBI observations of a H2O maser were done at five epochs in 1980-82 with a 5 station VLBI network (see 1992ApJ...393..149G). A model was fitted to each peak in any spectral channel exceeding 5 times the rms background. The minimum level of this background, due to system noise at the antennas, was about 0.2Jy at each epoch. The model parameters include right ascension and declination offset (x, y) relative to a reference position; the total flux density, S; and the angular diameter {theta}_H_, of the best-fitting Gaussian distribution of intensity. The fitted parameters are in table1.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/892/18
- Title:
- X-ray & MIR luminosities of the GBT galaxies
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/892/18
- Date:
- 19 Jan 2022 08:55:44
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present an investigation of the dependence of H_2_O maser detection rates and properties on the mid-IR active galactic nucleus (AGN) luminosity, L_AGN_, and the obscuring column density, N_H_, based on mid-IR and hard X-ray photometry. Based on spectral energy distribution fitting that allows for decomposition of the black hole accretion and star formation components in the mid-infrared, we show that the megamaser (disk maser) detection rate increases sharply for galaxies with 12{mu}m AGN luminosity L_12um_^AGN^ greater than 10^42^erg/s, from <~3% (<~2%) to ~12% (~5%). By using the ratio of the observed X-ray to mid-IR AGN luminosity as an indicator of N_H_, we also find that megamaser (disk maser) detection rates are boosted to 15% (7%) and 20% (9%) for galaxies with N_H_>=10^23^/cm^2^ and N_H_>=10^24^cm^-2^, respectively. Combining these column density cuts with a constraint for high L_12um_^AGN^ (>=10^42^erg/s) predicts further increases in the megamaser (disk maser) detection rates to 19% (8%) and 27% (14%), revealing unprecedented potential increases of the megamaser and disk maser detection rates by a factor of 7-15 relative to the current rates, depending on the chosen sample selection criteria. A noteworthy aspect of these new predictions is that the completeness rates are only compromised mildly, with the rates remaining at the level of ~95% (~50%) for sources with N_H_>=10^23^/cm^2^ (N_H_>=10^24^/cm^2^). Applying these selection methods to current X-ray AGN surveys predicts the detection of >~15 new megamaser disks.