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P67 |
May 2001
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To be published in:
Astronomical Journal
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Interstellar Bubbles in Two Young HII Regions
Yaël Nazé1,2,*,
You-Hua Chu2,**,
Sean D. Points2,**,
Charles W. Danforth3,**,
Margarita Rosado4 and
C.-H. Rosie Chen2
1 Institut d'Astrophysique et de Géophysique - Université de Liège, Avenue de Cointe 5, 4000 Liège, Belgium
2 Astronomy Department, University of Illinois, 1002 W. Green Street, Urbana, IL 61801, USA
3 Department of Physics and Astronomy, Johns Hopkins University, 3400 N. Charles Street, Baltimore, MD 21218, USA
4 Instituto de Astronomía IA - UNAM, Apartado 70-264, 04510 Mexico D.F., Mexico
* Research Fellow FNRS, Belgium
** Visting astronomer, Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory
Massive stars are expected to produce wind-blown bubbles in the
interstellar medium; however, ring nebulae, suggesting the
existence of bubbles, are rarely seen around main-sequence O stars.
To search for wind-blown bubbles around main-sequence O stars,
we have obtained high-resolution Hubble Space Telescope
WFPC2 images and high-dispersion echelle spectra of two pristine
HII regions, N11B and N180B, in the Large
Magellanic Cloud. These HII regions are
ionized by OB associations that still contain O3 stars, suggesting
that the HII regions are young and have not
hosted any supernova explosions. Our observations show that
wind-blown bubbles in these HII regions can
be detected kinematically but not morphologically because their
expansion velocities are comparable to or only slightly higher
than the isothermal sound velocity in the HII
regions. Bubbles are detected around concentrations of massive
stars, individual O stars, and even an evolved red supergiant
(a fossil bubble). Comparisons between the observed bubble
dynamics and model predictions show a large discrepancy (1-2
orders of magnitude) between the stellar wind luminosity derived
from bubble observations and models and that derived from
observations of stellar winds. The number and distribution of
bubbles in N11B differ from those in N180B, which can be explained
by the difference in the richness of stellar content between these
two HII regions. Most of the bubbles
observed in N11B and N180B show a blister-structure, indicating
that the stars were formed on the surfaces of dense clouds.
Numerous small dust clouds, similar to Bok globules or elephant
trunks, are detected in these HII regions
and at least one of them hosts on-going star formation.
HII regions - ISM: bubbles - ISM: kinematics and
dynamics - ISM: individual (N11B, N180B) - Magellanic CLouds
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