Star formation, structure, and formation mechanism of cometary globules: NIR observations of CG 1 and CG 2
M. M. M\"akel\"a, L. K. Haikala

TL;DR
This study investigates the structure and star formation activity of cometary globules CG 1 and CG 2 in the Gum Nebula using near-infrared observations, revealing new young stellar objects and analyzing their formation mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides new NIR observations, discovers previously unknown NIR-excess objects, and offers insights into the star formation processes and structure of CG 1 and CG 2.
Findings
Discovered three new NIR-excess objects indicating star formation.
Detected a probable class I protostar in CG 1.
Analyzed mass distribution but found no definitive formation mechanism evidence.
Abstract
Cometary globule (CG) 1 and CG 2 are "classic" CGs in the Gum Nebula. They have compact heads and long dusty tails that point away from the centre of the Gum Nebula. We study the structure of CG 1 and CG 2 and the star formation in them to find clues to the CG formation mechanism. The two possible mechanisms, radiation-driven implosion (RDI) and a supernova (SN) blast wave, produce a characteristic mass distribution where the major part of the mass is situated in either the head (RDI) or the tail (SN). CG 1 and CG 2 were imaged in the near infrared (NIR) JsHKs bands. NIR photometry was used to locate NIR excess objects and to create extinction maps of the CGs. The A_V maps allow us to analyse the large-scale structure of CG 1 and CG 2. Archival images from the WISE and Spitzer satellites and HIRES-processed IRAS images were used to study the small-scale structure. In addition to the…
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