The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series (Jan 2023)

Physical Environments of the Luminosity Outburst Source NGC 6334I Traced by Thermal and Maser Lines of Multiple Molecules

  • Jiong-Heng Wu,
  • Xi Chen,
  • Yan-Kun Zhang,
  • Simon P. Ellingsen,
  • Andrej M. Sobolev,
  • Zhang Zhao,
  • Shi-Ming Song,
  • Zhi-Qiang Shen,
  • Bin Li,
  • Bo Xia,
  • Rong-Bin Zhao,
  • Jing-Qing Wang,
  • Ya-Jun Wu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4365/acbd46
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 265, no. 2
p. 49

Abstract

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We have conducted a systematic line survey, primarily focused on transitions of the methanol and ammonia molecules, and monitoring observations of masers toward the high-mass star-forming region NGC 6334I. These observations were undertaken between 2019 and 2022 in the C, K, Ka , and Q bands with the Tianma Radio Telescope. In total, 63 CH _3 OH (including 11 class I and nine class II maser or maser candidate), 18 ^13 CH _3 OH, and 34 NH _3 (including seven maser or maser candidate) transitions were detected. The emission is likely associated with the luminosity outburst source MM1. Rotation diagram analysis of multiple ammonia transitions shows that the gas temperature in the molecular core was a factor of 2 higher than that measured in previous observations in the pre-burst stage. This suggests that the molecular core has likely been heated by radiation originating from the luminosity outburst. Maser variability in the methanol and excited-state OH masers shows a general trend that the maser components associated with the luminosity outburst have decreased in their intensity since 2020. The decay in the maser luminosity indicates that the outburst is possibly declining, and as a result, the duration of the MM1 luminosity outburst may be shorter than the predicted 40 yr duration. Compared to the masers detected toward another luminosity outburst source, G358.93-0.03, abundant class I methanol masers and strong water maser flares were also detected toward NGC 633I, but masers from rare class II methanol transitions and new molecules were absent toward NGC 6334I. The large number of detections of maser transitions toward the two burst sources provided a database for further maser modeling to explore the physical environments associated with accretion burst events.

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