Sagittarius B2 Main: A Cluster of Ultra-Compact HII Regions and Massive Protostellar Cores
Abstract
The ionized core in the Sgr B2 Main star-forming region was imaged using the Submillimeter Array archival data observed for the H26α line and continuum emission at 0.86 millimeter with an angular resolution 0.3. Eight hyper-compact H26α emission sources were detected with a typical size in the range of 1.6--20×102 AU and electron density of 0.3--3×107 cm-3, corresponding to the emission measure 0.4--8.4×1010 cm-6 pc. The H26α line fluxes from the eight hyper-compact HII sources imply that the ionization for each of the sources must be powered by a Lyman continuum flux from an O star or a cluster of B stars. The most luminous H26α source among the eight detected requires an O6 star that appears to be embedded in the ultra-compact HII region F3. In addition, 23 compact continuum emission sources were also detected within the central 5×3\,(0.2 pc) region. In the assumption of a power-law distribution for the dust temperature, with the observed brightness temperature of the dust emission we determined the physical properties of the submillimeter emission sources showing that the molecular densities are in the range of 1--10×108 cm-3, surface densities between 13 to 150 g cm-2, and total gas masses in the range from 5 to 200 M which are 1 or 2 orders of magnitude greater than the corresponding values of the Bonnor-Ebert mass. With a mean free-fall time scale of 2×103 y, each of the massive protostellar cores are undergoing gravitational collapse to form new massive stars in the Sgr B2 Main core.
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