Submillimeter Continuum Emission in the ρ Ophiuchi Molecular Cloud: Filaments, Arcs, and an Unidentified Far-Infrared Object Journal Articles uri icon

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abstract

  • New wide-field images of the Rho Ophiuchus molecular cloud at 850 and 450 microns obtained with SCUBA on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope reveal a wide variety of large-scale features that were previously unknown. Two linear features each 4' (0.2 pc) in length extend to the north of the bright emission region containing SM1 and VLA 1623. These features may correspond to the walls of a previously unidentified outflow cavity, or the boundary of a photon dominated region powered by a nearby B star. A previously unidentified source is located in the north-east region of the image. The properties of this source (diameter ~5000 AU, mass ~0.3-1 Msun) suggest that it is a pre-protostellar core. Two arcs of emission are seen in the direction of the north-west extension of the VLA 1623 outflow. The outer arc appears relatively smooth at 850 microns and is estimated to have a mass of ~0.3 Msun, while the inner arc breaks up into a number of individual clumps, some of which are previously identified protostars.

publication date

  • March 10, 1999