Centimeter-wave continuum radiation from the rho Ophiuchi molecular cloud
Simon Casassus (1), Clive Dickinson (2), Kieran Cleary (3), Roberta, Paladini (2), Mireya Etxaluze (4,5), Tanya Lim (5), Glenn J. White (4,5),, Michael Burton (6), Balt Indermuehle (6), Otmar Stahl (7), Patrick Roche (8), ((1) U. Chile, (2) IPAC/Caltech, (3) CO/Caltech

TL;DR
This paper investigates unexpected centimeter-wave continuum emission from the rho Ophiuchi molecular cloud, exploring dust-related mechanisms, spinning dust, and residual charges to explain the observations.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the emission mechanisms in rho Oph, favoring spinning dust and residual charge models over magnetic grain opacity enhancements.
Findings
Spinning dust explains the radio spectrum well.
Magnetic enhancement of grain opacity is inconsistent with dust morphology.
Residual charges could account for the continuum if dense clumps are present.
Abstract
The rho Oph molecular cloud is undergoing intermediate-mass star formation. UV radiation from its hottest young stars heats and dissociates exposed layers, but does not ionize hydrogen. Only faint radiation from the Rayleigh-Jeans tail of ~10-100K dust is expected at wavelengths longwards of 3mm. Yet Cosmic Background Imager (CBI) observations reveal that the rho Oph W photo-dissociation region (PDR) is surprisingly bright at centimetre wavelengths. We searched for interpretations consistent with the WMAP radio spectrum, new ISO-LWS parallel mode images and archival Spitzer data. Dust-related emission mechanisms at 1 cm, as proposed by Draine & Lazarian, are a possibility. But a magnetic enhancement of the grain opacity at 1cm is inconsistent with the morphology of the dust column maps Nd and the lack of detected polarization. Spinning dust, or electric-dipole radiation from spinning…
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