ISOPHOT Serendipity Survey observations of interstellar clouds I. Detection of the Coldest Cores in Chamaeleon

Krause, O.; Lemke, D.; Laureijs, R. J.; Lehtinen, K.; Mattila, K.; Stickel, M.; Hotzel, S.; Tóth, L. V.

Germany, Hungary, Finland, Spain

Abstract

ISOPHOT Serendipity Survey (ISOSS) observations at 170 \um\ reveal cold dust clouds in the nearby star forming region Chamaeleon. The distribution of the ISOSS/IRAS based T(I170/I100) colour temperature have been studied in a nearby low-mass star forming region. T(I170/I100) separates the obscured and intercloud regions as seen from a comparison to optical extinction data. The interstellar medium in Chamaeleon-Musca appears to be cold with dust colour temperatures of ~ 16.3 K for intercloud regions, and <= 14.5 K for obscured clouds. The cold clouds account for 3 % of the area. ISOSS found 9 very cold cores with colour temperatures as low as Tdust <~ 12.5 K in an 11°ee x 8°ee sized region. All \CeiO\ cores of the Chamaeleon main clouds which were crossed by ISOSS slews were also detected. Of these 11 (73 %) are cold with T_dust <= 15 K, 6 (40 %) are associated with very cold cores. The very cold cores have high gas column densities, N(Htwo )>1021 cm-2, and 7 out of 9 have low gas kinetic temperatures as indicated by Tex(CeiO ) 8 K. The physical parameters of the very cold cores agree with the results of radiative transfer calculations of a spherical model cloud heated from outside by one third of the the solar neighbourhood ISRF intensity. A check of the photometric calibration of ISOSS against ISOPHOT AOT PHT22 maps and DIRBE interpolated 170 \um\ values showed an agreement of +/- 10 % and +/- 20 %, respectively. We expect to discover in total more than 100 very cold cores in the Galaxy by ISOSS.

2000 Astronomy and Astrophysics
ISO 25