Dust-temperature of an isolated star-forming cloud: Herschel observations of the Bok globule CB244
A. Stutz, R. Launhardt, H. Linz, O. Krause, T. Henning, J., Kainulainen, M. Nielbock, J. Steinacker, P. Andre

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel observations to map dust temperature and mass distribution in the Bok globule CB244, revealing temperature variations and mass estimates of star-forming regions within the cloud.
Contribution
First dust-temperature map of an entire star-forming molecular cloud derived from Herschel data, combining multiple observations and modeling techniques.
Findings
Dust temperature near protostar ~17.7 K
Starless core dust temperature ~10.6 K
Approximately 45% of the globule's mass is involved in star formation
Abstract
We present Herschel observations of the isolated, low-mass star-forming Bok globule CB244. It contains two cold sources, a low-mass Class 0 protostar and a starless core, which is likely to be prestellar in nature, separated by 90 arcsec (~ 18000 AU). The Herschel data sample the peak of the Planck spectrum for these sources, and are therefore ideal for dust-temperature and column density modeling. With these data and a near-IR extinction map, the MIPS 70 micron mosaic, the SCUBA 850 micron map, and the IRAM 1.3 mm map, we model the dust-temperature and column density of CB244 and present the first measured dust-temperature map of an entire star-forming molecular cloud. We find that the column-averaged dust-temperature near the protostar is ~ 17.7 K, while for the starless core it is ~ 10.6K, and that the effect of external heating causes the cloud dust-temperature to rise to ~ 17 K…
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