Origin of the Lyman excess in early-type stars
R. Cesaroni, \'A. S\'anchez-Monge, M.T. Beltr\'an, S. Molinari, L., Olmi, S.P. Trevi\~no-Morales

TL;DR
This study investigates the origin of the Lyman excess in early-type stars' HII regions, finding that UV emission from accretion shocks likely explains the excess, implying prolonged accretion in massive star formation.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence linking Lyman excess to accretion shocks, challenging the assumption that accretion stops after HII region formation.
Findings
Lyman excess sources are more associated with infall signposts.
Outflow activity shows no significant difference between sources.
UV emission from accretion shocks likely causes the Lyman excess.
Abstract
Ionized regions around early-type stars are believed to be well-known objects, but until recently, our knowledge of the relation between the free-free radio emission and the IR emission has been observationally hindered by the limited angular resolution in the far-IR. The advent of Herschel has now made it possible to obtain a more precise comparison between the two regimes, and it has been found that about a third of the young HII regions emit more Lyman continuum photons than expected, thus presenting a Lyman excess. With the present study we wish to distinguish between two scenarios that have been proposed to explain the existence of the Lyman excess: (i) underestimation of the bolometric luminosity, or (ii) additional emission of Lyman-continuum photons from an accretion shock. We observed an outflow (SiO) and an infall (HCO+) tracer toward a complete sample of 200 HII regions, 67…
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