Gamma-ray emission from massive young stellar objects
A. T. Araudo, G. E. Romero, V. Bosch-Ramon, J. M. Paredes

TL;DR
This paper models the gamma-ray emission from massive young stellar objects, especially IRAS 16547-4247, predicting detectable high-energy signals due to relativistic particles accelerated in stellar jets.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed spectral energy distribution predictions for non-thermal emission from massive young stellar objects, highlighting potential gamma-ray and X-ray detectability.
Findings
High-energy gamma-ray emission may be detectable from IRAS 16547-4247.
Relativistic electrons produce observable synchrotron and inverse Compton radiation.
The model predicts X-ray emission detectable with current instruments.
Abstract
Massive stars form in dense and massive molecular cores. The exact formation mechanism is unclear, but it is possible that some massive stars are formed by processes similar to those that produce the low-mass stars, with accretion/ejection phenomena occurring at some point of the evolution of the protostar. This picture seems to be supported by the detection of a collimated stellar wind emanating from the massive protostar IRAS 16547-4247. A triple radio source is associated with the protostar: a compact core and two radio lobes. The emission of the southern lobe is clearly non-thermal. Such emission is interpreted as synchrotron radiation produced by relativistic electrons locally accelerated at the termination point of a thermal jet. Since the ambient medium is determined by the properties of the molecular cloud in which the whole system is embedded, we can expect high densities of…
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