SMA and Spitzer Observations of Bok Glouble CB17: A Candidate First Hydrostatic Core?
Xuepeng Chen (1), Hector G. Arce (1), Michael M. Dunham (1), Qizhou, Zhang (2), Tyler L. Bourke (2), Ralf Launhardt (3), Markus Schmalzl (3), and, Thomas Henning (3) ((1) Yale Astronomy Department, (2) Harvard-Smithsonian, Center for Astrophysics

TL;DR
This study uses SMA and Spitzer observations to identify CB17 MMS as a candidate first hydrostatic core, providing insights into early star formation stages with detailed observational evidence.
Contribution
The paper presents high-resolution observations of CB17 revealing a potential first hydrostatic core, a key stage in star formation, which has not been conclusively observed before.
Findings
CB17 MMS is faint in infrared, with low luminosity and temperature.
CB17 MMS may drive a low-velocity outflow, indicating early protostellar activity.
Characteristics are consistent with theoretical models of a first hydrostatic core.
Abstract
We present high angular resolution SMA and Spitzer observations toward the Bok globule CB17. SMA 1.3mm dust continuum images reveal within CB17 two sources with an angular separation of about 21" (about 5250 AU at a distance of 250 pc). The northwestern continuum source, referred to as CB17 IRS, dominates the infrared emission in the Spitzer images, drives a bipolar outflow extending in the northwest-southeast direction, and is classified as a low luminosity Class0/I transition object (L_bol ~ 0.5 L_sun). The southeastern continuum source, referred to as CB17 MMS, has faint dust continuum emission in the SMA 1.3mm observations (about 6 sigma detection; ~3.8 mJy), but is not detected in the deep Spitzer infrared images at wavelengths from 3.6 to 70 micron. Its bolometric luminosity and temperature, estimated from its spectral energy distribution, are less than 0.04 L_sun and 16 K,…
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