A Multiwavelength Study of Young Massive Star-Forming Regions. III. Mid-Infrared Emission
Esteban F. E. Morales (1), Diego Mardones (1), Guido Garay (1), Kate, J. Brooks (2), Jaime E. Pineda (3) ((1) Universidad de Chile, (2) ATNF, (3), CfA)

TL;DR
This study uses mid-infrared observations to analyze the structure and composition of young massive star-forming regions, revealing compact sources, protostars, and the coexistence of ionized gas and hot dust.
Contribution
It provides high-resolution MIR imaging and spectra of 14 star-forming regions, identifying new protostellar candidates and comparing MIR and radio morphologies.
Findings
Identification of compact MIR sources without radio emission as protostar candidates.
Detection of silicate absorption features indicating high column densities.
Observation of bright [Ne II] emission in ionized regions.
Abstract
We present mid-infrared (MIR) observations, made with the TIMMI2 camera on the ESO 3.6 m telescope, toward 14 young massive star-forming regions. All regions were imaged in the N band, and nine in the Q band, with an angular resolution of ~ 1 arcsec. Typically, the regions exhibit a single or two compact sources (with sizes in the range 0.008-0.18 pc) plus extended diffuse emission. The Spitzer-Galactic Legacy Infrared Mid-Plane Survey Extraordinaire images of these regions show much more extended emission than that seen by TIMMI2, and this is attributed to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) bands. For the MIR sources associated with radio continuum radiation (Paper I) there is a close morphological correspondence between the two emissions, suggesting that the ionized gas (radio source) and hot dust (MIR source) coexist inside the H II region. We found five MIR compact sources which…
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