The initial conditions of isolated star formation -- IX. Akari mapping of an externally heated pre-stellar core
D. Nutter, D. Stamatellos, D. Ward-Thompson

TL;DR
This study uses multi-wavelength observations to reveal temperature gradients in pre-stellar cores, showing that core morphology varies with wavelength and emphasizing the importance of accounting for temperature gradients in data interpretation.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates the presence of temperature gradients in pre-stellar cores and models their effects, highlighting the influence of nearby stars on core temperature structures.
Findings
Core temperature gradients cause wavelength-dependent morphology.
Radiative transfer models fit observed data well.
Nearby stars significantly influence core heating.
Abstract
We present observations of L1155 and L1148 in the Cepheus molecular cloud, taken using the FIS instrument on the Akari satellite. We compare these data to submillimetre data taken using the SCUBA camera on the JCMT, and far-infrared data taken with the ISOPHOT camera on board the ISO satellite. All of the data show a relation between the position of the peak of emission and the wavelength for the core of L1155. We interpret this as a temperature gradient. We fit modified blackbody curves to the spectral energy distributions at two positions in the core and see that the central core in L1155 (L1155C) is approximately 2 degrees warmer at one edge than it is in the centre. We consider a number of possible heating sources and conclude that the A6V star BD+67 1263 is the most likely candidate. This star is at a distance of 0.7 pc from the front of L1155C in the plane of the sky. We carry out…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
