Spatial distributions and kinematics of shocked and ionized gas in M17 (2306.12128v1)
Abstract: Massive stars are formed in molecular clouds, and produce H II regions when they evolve onto the main sequence. The expansion of H II region can both suppress and promote star formation in the vicinity. M17 H II region is a giant cometary H II region near many massive clumps containing starless and protostellar sources. It is an appropriate target to study the effect of feedback from previously formed massive stars on the nearby star-forming environments. Observations of SiO 2-1, HCO$+$ 1-0, H${13}$CO$+$ 1-0, HC$_3$N 10-9, and H41$\alpha$ lines are performed toward M17 H II region with ambient candidates of massive clumps. In the observations, the widespread shocked gas surrounding M17 H II region is detected: it probably originates from the collision between the expanding ionized gas and the ambient neutral medium. Some massive clumps are found in the overlap region of the shock and dense-gas tracing lines while the central velocities of shocked and high-density gases are similar. This suggests that part of massive clumps are located in the shell of H II region, and may be formed from the accumulated neutral materials in the shell. In addition, by comparing the observations toward M17 H II region with the simulation of cometary H II region, we infer the presence of one or more massive stars travelling at supersonic velocity with respect to the natal molecular cloud in the H II region.
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.