The Ionized Circumstellar Envelopes of Orion Source I and the Becklin Neugebauer Object
R. L. Plambeck, A. D. Bolatto, J. M. Carpenter, J. A. Eisner, J. W., Lamb, E. M. Leitch, D. P. Marrone, S. J. Muchovej, L. M. Perez, M. W. Pound,, P. J. Teuben, N. H. Volgenau, D. P. Woody, M. C. H. Wright, B. A. Zauderer

TL;DR
This study maps the 229 GHz radio emission from Orion Source I and BN, revealing their distinct emission mechanisms and physical conditions, with Source I likely powered by H- free-free opacity in a cool disk, and BN by a hypercompact HII region.
Contribution
First high-resolution 229 GHz mapping of Orion Source I and BN, providing detailed flux measurements and insights into their emission mechanisms and physical states.
Findings
SrcI is optically thick at 229 GHz and likely powered by H- free-free emission.
BN shows signs of becoming optically thin at 229 GHz with a B star-like ionization.
SrcI brightened over 15 years relative to BN.
Abstract
The 229 GHz (lambda 1.3mm) radio emission from Orion-KL was mapped with up to 0.14" angular resolution with CARMA, allowing measurements of the flux densities of Source I ('SrcI') and the Becklin-Neugebauer Object (BN), the 2 most massive stars in this region. We find integrated flux densities of 310 +/- 45 mJy for SrcI and 240 +/- 35 mJy for BN. SrcI is optically thick even at 229 GHz. No trace of the H30alpha recombination line is seen in its spectrum, although the v_2=1, 5(5,0)-6(4,3) transition of H2O, 3450 K above the ground state, is prominent. SrcI is elongated at position angle 140 degrees, as in 43 GHz images. These results are most easily reconciled with models in which the radio emission from SrcI arises via the H- free-free opacity in a T < 4500 K disk, as considered by Reid et al. (2007). By contrast, the radio spectrum of BN is consistent with p+/e- free-free emission from…
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