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

Juvela, M.; McGehee, P.; Ristorcelli, I.; Shimajiri, Y.; Marton, G.; Ysard, N.; Bernard, J. -Ph.; Rivera-Ingraham, A.; Montillaud, J.; Malinen, J.; Pelkonen, V. -M.; Zahorecz, S.; Takita, S.; Doi, Y.; Tóth, L. V.; Kawabe, R.; Arimatsu, K.; Haikala, L. K.; Tsukagoshi, T.

Finland, Hungary, France, Japan, Chile, United States

Abstract

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 σe(250 μm) = 0.5-1.5 × 10-25 cm2/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.

Herschel is an ESA space observatory with science instruments provided by European-led Principal Investigator consortia and with important participation from NASA.The reduced PACS and SPIRE data, including T and beta maps (in FITS format) are only available at the CDS via anonymous ftp to http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr (ftp://130.79.128.5) or via http://cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr/viz-bin/qcat?J/A+A/563/A125Appendices are available in electronic form at http://www.aanda.org

2014 Astronomy and Astrophysics
Herschel ISO AKARI Planck 20