Gas and dust in the star-forming region rho Oph A: The dust opacity exponent beta and the gas-to-dust mass ratio g2d
R. Liseau, B. Larsson, T. Lunttila, M. Olberg, G. Rydbeck, P. Bergman,, K. Justtanont, G. Olofsson, B.L. de Vries

TL;DR
This study maps the distribution of gas and dust in the rho Oph A star-forming region, analyzing their relative abundances, dust opacity variations, and grain growth, revealing spatial segregation and evolutionary trends.
Contribution
It introduces combined 1D and 3D analysis methods for mapping gas and dust, and investigates the spatial and temporal variations of the dust opacity exponent beta.
Findings
Gas-to-dust ratio varies across the region, averaging around 88.
Beta decreases from about 2 in starless regions to near 0 in disk-dominated sources.
Grain growth occurs mainly in circumstellar disks.
Abstract
We aim at determining the spatial distribution of the gas and dust in star-forming regions and address their relative abundances in quantitative terms. We also examine the dust opacity exponent beta for spatial and/or temporal variations. Using mapping observations of the very dense rho Oph A core, we examined standard 1D and non-standard 3D methods to analyse data of far-infrared and submillimeter (submm) continuum radiation. The resulting dust surface density distribution can be compared to that of the gas. The latter was derived from the analysis of accompanying molecular line emission, observed with Herschel from space and with APEX from the ground. As a gas tracer we used N2H+, which is believed to be much less sensitive to freeze-out than CO and its isotopologues. Radiative transfer modelling of the N2H+(J=3-2) and (J=6-5) lines with their hyperfine structure explicitly taken into…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Atmospheric Ozone and Climate · Space Exploration and Technology
