Irradiated Interfaces in the Ara OB1, Carina, Eagle Nebula, and Cyg OB2 Massive Star Formation Regions
P. Hartigan, J. Palmer, and L. I. Cleeves

TL;DR
This paper presents H2 imaging of four massive star formation regions, revealing diverse PDR boundary structures and fluorescence features that enhance understanding of radiation hydrodynamics and star formation processes.
Contribution
It provides new H2 images of multiple star-forming regions, illustrating different PDR boundary types and their associated structures, linking observations to radiation hydrodynamics phenomena.
Findings
Carina shows strong H2 fluorescence along pillars and walls.
Eagle Nebula contains regions with intense fluorescence and pillars.
Cyg OB2 has many fluoresced globules pointing towards ionizing sources.
Abstract
Regions of massive star formation offer some of the best and most easily-observed examples of radiation hydrodynamics. Boundaries where fully-ionized H II regions transition to neutral/molecular photodissociation regions (PDRs) are of particular interest because marked temperature and density contrasts across the boundaries lead to evaporative flows and fluid dynamical instabilities that can evolve into spectacular pillar-like structures. When detached from their parent clouds, pillars become ionized globules that often harbor one or more young stars. H2 molecules at the interface between a PDR and an H II region absorb ultraviolet light from massive stars, and the resulting fluoresced infrared emission lines are an ideal way to trace this boundary independent of obscuring dust. This paper presents H2 images of four regions of massive star formation that illustrate different types of…
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