The JCMT Gould Belt Survey: Evidence for radiative heating in Serpens MWC 297 and its influence on local star formation
D. Rumble, J. Hatchell, R.A. Gutermuth, H. Kirk, J. Buckle, S.F., Beaulieu, D.S. Berry, H. Broekhoven-Fiene, M.J. Currie, M. Fich, T. Jenness,, D. Johnstone, J.C. Mottram, D. Nutter, K. Pattle, J.E. Pineda, C. Quinn, C., Salji, S. Tisi, S. Walker-Smith, J. Di Francesco

TL;DR
This study uses submillimeter observations to demonstrate that radiative heating from the star MWC 297 influences the temperature and stability of nearby star-forming clumps, affecting their potential to collapse and form new stars.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence of radiative feedback from MWC 297 on local star formation, highlighting its role in heating and stabilizing surrounding molecular clumps.
Findings
MWC 297's free-free emission contaminates submillimeter fluxes
Identified 23 YSOs with various classes and masses
Radiative heating may suppress clump collapse
Abstract
We present SCUBA-2 450micron and 850micron observations of the Serpens MWC 297 region, part of the JCMT Gould Belt Survey of nearby star-forming regions. Simulations suggest that radiative feedback influences the star-formation process and we investigate observational evidence for this by constructing temperature maps. Maps are derived from the ratio of SCUBA-2 fluxes and a two component model of the JCMT beam for a fixed dust opacity spectral index of beta = 1.8. Within 40 of the B1.5Ve Herbig star MWC 297, the submillimetre fluxes are contaminated by free-free emission with a spectral index of 1.03+-0.02, consistent with an ultra-compact HII region and polar winds/jets. Contamination accounts for 73+-5 per cent and 82+-4 per cent of peak flux at 450micron and 850micron respectively. The residual thermal disk of the star is almost undetectable at these wavelengths. Young Stellar…
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