Studying the effects and cause of the massive star formation in Messier 8 East
Abstract
Messier 8 (M8), one of the brightest HII regions in our Galaxy, is associated with two prominent massive star-forming regions: M8-Main, the particularly bright part of the large scale HII region (mainly) ionised by the stellar system Herschel 36 (Her 36) and M8 East (M8 E), which is mainly powered by a deeply embedded young stellar object (YSO), a bright infrared (IR) source, M8E-IR. We aim to study the interaction of the massive star-forming region M8 E with its surroundings and to compare the star-forming environments of M8-Main and M8 E. We used the IRAM 30 m telescope to perform an imaging spectroscopy survey of the molecular environment of M8E-IR. We imaged and analysed data for the J = 1 0 rotational transitions of 12CO, 13CO, N2H+, HCN, H13CN, HCO+, H13CO+, HNC and HN13C observed for the first time toward M8~E. We used LTE and non-LTE techniques to determine column densities of the observed species and to constrain the physical conditions of the gas responsible for their emission. Examining the YSO population in M8~E allows us to explore the observed ionization front (IF) as seen in GLIMPSE 8~μm emission image. We find that 12CO probes the warm diffuse gas also traced by the GLIMPSE 8~μm emission, while N2H+ and HN13C trace the cool and dense gas. We find that the star-formation in M8~E appears to be triggered by the earlier formed stellar cluster NGC~6530, which powers an HII region giving rise to an IF that is moving at a speed ≥ 0.26~km~s-1 across M8~E. We derive temperatures of 80 K and 30 K for the warm and cool gas components, respectively, and constrain H2 volume densities to be in the range of 104--106~cm-3. Comparison of the observed abundances of various species reflects the fact that M8~E is at an earlier stage of massive star formation than M8-Main.
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