VLT near- to mid-IR imaging and spectroscopy of the M17 UC1-IRS5 region
Abstract
We investigate the surroundings of the hypercompact HII region M17 UC1 to probe the physical properties of the associated young stellar objects and the environment of massive star formation. Five of the seven point sources in this region show L-band excess emission. Geometric match is found between the H2 emission and near-IR polarized light in the vicinity of IRS5A, and between the diffuse mid-IR emission and near-IR polarization north of UC1. The H2 emission is typical for dense PDRs, which are FUV pumped initially and repopulated by collisional de-excitation. The spectral types of IRS5A and B273A are B3-B7 V/III and G4-G5 III, respectively. The observed infrared luminosity LIR in the range 1-20 micron is derived for three objects; we obtain 2.0x103 L for IRS5A, 13 L for IRS5C, and 10 L for B273A. IRS5 might be a young quadruple system. Its primary star IRS5A is confirmed to be a high-mass protostellar object (~ 9 M, ~1x105 yrs); it might have terminated accretion due to the feedback from the stellar activities (radiation pressure, outflow) and the expanding HII region of M17. UC1 might also have terminated accretion because of the expanding hypercompact HII region ionized by itself. The disk clearing process of the low-mass YSOs in this region might be accelerated by the expanding HII region. The outflows driven by UC1 are running in south-north with its northeastern side suppressed by the expanding ionization front of M17; the blue-shifted outflow lobe of IRS5A is seen in two types of tracers along the same line of sight in the form of H2 emission filament and mid-emission. The H2 line ratios probe the properties of M17 SW PDR, which is confirmed to have a clumpy structure with two temperature distributions: warm, dense molecular clumps with nH>105 cm-3 and T~575 K and cooler atomic gas with nH~3.7x103-1.5x104 cm-3 and T~50-200 K.
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