Trigonometric Parallaxes of 6.7 GHz Methanol Masers

Abstract

Emission from the 6.7 GHz methanol maser transition is very strong, is relatively stable, has small internal motions, and is observed toward numerous massive star-forming regions in the Galaxy. Our goal is to perform high-precision astrometry using this maser transition to obtain accurate distances to their host regions. Eight strong masers were observed during five epochs of VLBI observations with the European VLBI Network between 2006 June, and 2008 March. We report trigonometric parallaxes for five star-forming regions, with accuracies as good as 22 μas. Distances to these sources are 2.57+0.34-0.27 kpc for ON 1, 0.776+0.104-0.083 kpc for L 1206, 0.929+0.034-0.033 kpc for L 1287, 2.38+0.13-0.12 kpc for NGC 281-W, and 1.59+0.07-0.06 kpc for S 255. The distances and proper motions yield the full space motions of the star-forming regions hosting the masers, and we find that these regions lag circular rotation on average by 17 km s-1, a value comparable to those found recently by similar studies.

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