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arxiv: 1202.4802 · v1 · pith:M4HZX4BNnew · submitted 2012-02-22 · 🌌 astro-ph.SR

First Science Observations with SOFIA/FORCAST: 6 TO 37 micron Imaging of Orion BN/KL

classification 🌌 astro-ph.SR
keywords sourcewavelengthsbeenimagesmicronobservationsregioncomplex
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The BN/KL region of the Orion Nebula is the nearest region of high mass star formation in our galaxy. As such, it has been the subject of intense investigation at a variety of wavelengths, which have revealed it to be brightest in the infrared to sub-mm wavelength regime. Using the newly commissioned SOFIA airborne telescope and its 5-40 micron camera FORCAST, images of the entire BN/KL complex have been acquired. The 31.5 and 37.1 micron images represent the highest resolution observations (<=4") ever obtained of this region at these wavelengths. These observations reveal that the BN object is not the dominant brightness source in the complex at wavelengths >31.5 microns, and that this distinction goes instead to the source IRc4. It was determined from these images and derived dust color temperature maps that IRc4 is also likely to be self-luminous. A new source of emission has also been identified at wavelengths >31.5 microns that coincides with the northeastern outflow lobe from the protostellar disk associated with radio source I.

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  1. Velocity-resolved [O I] 63,145 um, [C II] 158 um, and OH line mapping along the Orion BN/KL explosive outflow and irradiated shocks

    astro-ph.GA 2026-05 accept novelty 7.0

    Velocity-resolved [O I] maps of the Orion BN/KL outflow yield a total luminosity of 86.5 L_sun and line ratios indicating dense (10^5–10^6 cm^-3), warm (~500 K) postshock gas from 30–40 km/s dissociative J-type shocks...