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F. Motte , P.André , R.Neri
CEA, DSM, DAPNIA, Service d'Astrophysique, C.E. Saclay,
F-91191 Gif-sur-Yvette Cedex, France
LAOG, Observatoire de Grenoble, UJF, BP 53, F-38041 Grenoble
Cedex 9, France
IRAM, 300 rue de la Piscine, F-38406 St. Martin d'Hères,
France
Abstract: We present the results of an extensive 1.3 mm continuum mosaicing
study of the Ophiuchi central region obtained at the IRAM 30-m
telescope with the MPIfR 19-channel bolometer array. The mosaiced
field covers a total area of arcmin , corresponding to
1 pc at a distance of 160 pc, and includes the DCO dense
cores Oph-A, Oph-B1, Oph-B2, Oph-C, Oph-D, Oph-E, and Oph-F. Our
mosaic is sensitive to features down to cm in column density. It is consistent with, but goes
significantly deeper than, previous dust continuum studies of the
cloud. For the first time, compact circumstellar dusty structures
around young stellar objects are detected simultaneously with more
extended emission from the dense cores and the ambient cloud. Thus, it
becomes possible to directly study the genetic link between dense
cores and young stars.
The diffuse cloud emission is itself fragmented in at least 58
small-scale, starless clumps harboring no infrared or radio continuum
sources in their centers. Most of these starless fragments are
probably gravitationally bound and pre-stellar in nature. Several of
them exhibit a relatively flat inner intensity profile, indicating
they are not as centrally condensed as the envelopes seen around the
embedded (Class I and Class 0) protostars of the cloud. Ten other
clumps appear to be sharply peaked, however, and may represent
candidate `isothermal protostars', i.e., collapsing cloud fragments
which have not yet developed a central hydrostatic core. The AU fragmentation sizescale estimated from our Oph
1.3 mm mosaic is consistent with the typical Jeans length in the DCO \
cores and is at least five times smaller than the diameter of isolated
dense cores in the Taurus cloud. In agreement with this short
length scale for fragmentation, the circumstellar envelopes surrounding
Oph Class I and Class 0 protostars are observed to have finite
sizes and to be significantly more compact than their Taurus
counterparts.
The measured frequency distribution of pre-stellar clump masses is
relatively shallow below , being consistent with
, but steepens to in the mass range. This is
reminiscent of the stellar initial mass function (IMF),
suggesting the clumps we detect may be the direct progenitors of
individual stars. Our observations therefore support theoretical
scenarios in which gravitational fragmentation plays a key role in
determining the stellar mass scale and the IMF.
Finally, the presence of several remarkable alignments of young stars
and starless clumps in the 1.3 mm dust continuum mosaic supports the
idea that various external agents, such as a slow shock wave
originating in the Sco OB2 association, have induced core
fragmentation and star formation in at least part of the cloud.
To appear in A&A. Preprints can be obtained from
http://iram.fr/papers/papers.html
Next: First detection of a
Up: Scientific results
Previous: SiO shocks in the
lucas@iram.fr