Long-term variability of Class I methanol masers in the high mass star forming region DR21(OH)
Nycole Wenner, A. P. Sarma, E. Momjian

TL;DR
This study investigates the long-term variability of Class I methanol masers in DR21(OH), revealing significant intensity changes over 5-10 years and suggesting episodic accretion as a possible cause.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of long-term variability of Class I methanol masers in a high mass star forming region, highlighting episodic accretion effects.
Findings
Masers show intensity increase from 2001 to 2012 and decrease from 2012 to 2017.
Variability is more prominent in the inner arc of the western lobe.
Long-term variability occurs over 5-10 years, linked to episodic accretion.
Abstract
High mass stars play an important role in the Interstellar Medium, but much remains to be known about their formation. Class I methanol masers may be unique tracers of an early stage of high mass star formation, and a better understanding of such masers will allow them to be used as more effective probes of the high mass star forming process. We present an investigation of the long-term variability of Class I methanol masers at 44 GHz toward the high mass star forming region DR21(OH). We compare observations taken in 2017 to 2012 and also to 2001 data from the literature. A total of 57 maser spots were found in the 2017 data, with center velocities ranging between -8.65 km/s to +2.56 km/s. The masers are arranged in a western and an eastern lobe with two arcs in each lobe that look like bowshocks, consistent with previous observations. The general trend is an increase in intensity from…
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