Globules and pillars in Cygnus X IV. Velocity-resolved [OI] 63 mu map of a peculiar proplyd-like object
N. Schneider (1), S. Dannhauer (1,2), E. Keilmann (1), S. Kabanovic (1), T. Topkaras (1), V. Ossenkopf-Okada (1), R. Higgins (1), A. Brunthaler (2), Won-Ju Kim (1,2), F. Comeron (3), M. Roellig (4,1), T. Csengeri (5), R. Simon (1), Y. Okada (1), M. Justen (1), S.A. Dzib (2)

TL;DR
This study maps and analyzes a peculiar globule in Cygnus X, revealing complex gas dynamics and suggesting it hosts a massive star with a photo-evaporating disk, challenging previous assumptions about its nature.
Contribution
It provides the first velocity-resolved [OI] 63 micron map of a proplyd-like object, combining multi-line data to characterize its physical conditions and star-forming potential.
Findings
Detected atomic and molecular lines across the object.
Evidence of a massive star with a possible bipolar outflow.
Photo-evaporation timescale shorter than star formation timescale.
Abstract
We investigated an isolated, globule-shaped object (0.37x0.11 pc), located near the centre of the Cygnus OB2 cluster and named proplyd #7 in optical observations. The source can be a massive star (with or without disc) with a HII region or a G-type T Tauri star with a photo-evaporating disc, embedded in a molecular envelope. We obtained a map of the OI line at 63 micron with 6" angular resolution and employed archival data of the CII 158 micron line (14" resolution), using the upGREAT heterodyne receiver aboard SOFIA. We also collected IRAM 30m CO data at 1mm (11" resolution). All the lines were detected across the whole object. The peak integrated OI emission of ~5 K km/s is located ~10" west of an embedded YSO. The OI and CII data near the source show bulk emission at ~11 km/s and a line wing at ~13 km/s, while the 12CO 2-1 data reveal additional blue-shifted high-velocity emission.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
