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Serpens Aquila Rift

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Right ascension
  
19 07

Apparent dimensions (V)
  
20 × 10°

Declination
  
+01° 00′

Designations
  
Aquila Rift

Serpens-Aquila Rift

Distance
  
750–1650 ly   (225–500 pc)

Constellation
  
Aquila, Serpens, Ophiuchus

The Serpens-Aquila Rift (also known as the Aquila Rift) is a region of the sky in the constellations Aquila, Serpens Cauda, and eastern Ophiuchus containing dark interstellar clouds. The region forms part of the Great Rift, a dark band that passes through the middle of the plane of the Milky Way Galaxy. The clouds that form this structure are called "molecular clouds", constituting a phase of the interstellar medium which is cold and dense enough for molecules to form, particularly molecular hydrogen (H2). These clouds are opaque to light in the optical part of the spectrum due to the presence of interstellar dust grains mixed with the gaseous component of the clouds. Therefore, the clouds in the Serpens-Aquila Rift block light from background stars in the disk of the Galaxy, forming the dark rift. The complex is located in a direction towards the inner Galaxy, where molecular clouds are common, so it is possible that not all components of the rift are at the same distance and physically associated with each other.

Contents

Several star-forming regions are projected in (or near) the direction of the Serpens-Aquila Rift, including Westerhout 40 (W40), Serpens Main, Serpens south, Serpens NH3, and MWC297/Sh2-62.

Distance

Distances to molecular clouds and star-forming regions in the Milky Way Galaxy have been difficult to constrain. By counting the number of stars in front of the Serpens-Aquila Rift and using statistical models of the distribution of stars in the Galaxy, astronomers estimated that stars begin to be obscured by the clouds at a distance of 225±55 pc.

For radio sources the Serpens Main star cluster, parallax measurements from the Very Long Baseline Array give a distance of 415±15 pc. The distance for Westerhout 40 has been estimated to be 500 pc using models for stellar luminosities.

Star formation

Westerhout 40 contains the largest cluster of young stars in the region, approximately 500 pre–main-sequence stars and the massive O-type star IRS 1A South. Serpens Main is another young cluster in which over 100 young stars have been discovered. Observations by the Spitzer Space Telescope revealed the Serpens south stellar nursery within a dense molecular filament. Class 0 protostars have been identified by millimeter radio observations of Westerhout 40 and Serpens South.

Serpens South is a star cluster embedded in a dense molecular filament containing numerous protostars. Due to the large number of protostars and pre-stellar cores in the region, it is likely that Serpens South has the most star-formation activity in the Serpens-Aquila Rift. A large scale magnetic field was discovered in the region which is perpendicular to the main cloud filament, but sub-filaments tend to run parallel to the filament. This magnetic field may be responsible for slowing the gravitational collapse of molecular clumps in the complex.

The Herschel Space Observatory has made a map of this region of the sky in mid- and far-infrared wavelengths. The molecular cloud at these wavelengths is traced by emission from warm dust in the clouds, allowing the structure of the clouds to be probed. Wavelet analysis of the molecular clouds in the approximately 11 square degree Herschel field of view breaks up the clouds into numerous filaments, mostly in and around the Westerhout 40 region. A number of possible "starless cores"—over-dense clumps of gas that may gravitationally collapse to form new stars—are also noted in this region, mostly studded along the molecular filaments. Millimeter observations from the IRAM 30m telescope provide confirmation for 46 of the starless-cores and Class 0/I protostars in the Westerhout 40 and Serpens south regions.

In culture

The Aquila Rift was featured in the short story "Beyond the Aquila Rift" by Alastair Reynolds in the 2005 science-fiction anthology Constellations.

References

Serpens-Aquila Rift Wikipedia