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  4. New Insights in the Bubble Wall of NGC 3324: Intertwined Substructures and a Bipolar Morphology Uncovered by JWST
 
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New Insights in the Bubble Wall of NGC 3324: Intertwined Substructures and a Bipolar Morphology Uncovered by JWST

Source
Astrophysical Journal
ISSN
0004637X
Date Issued
2023-11-01
Author(s)
Dewangan, L. K.
Maity, A. K.
Mayya, Y. D.
Bhadari, N. K.
Bhattacharyya, Suman
Sharma, Saurabh
Banerjee, Gourav
DOI
10.3847/1538-4357/ad004b
Volume
958
Issue
1
Abstract
We report the discovery of intertwined/entangled substructures toward the bubble wall of NGC 3324 below a physical scale of 4500 au, which is the sharp edge/ionization front/elongated structure traced at the interface between the H ii region and the molecular cloud. The sharp edge appears wavy in the Spitzer 3.6-8.0 μm images (resolution ∼2″). Star formation signatures have mostly been traced on one side of the ionization front, which lies on the molecular cloud’s boundary. The James Webb Space Telescope’s (JWST) near- and mid-infrared images (resolution ∼0.″07—0.″7) are employed to resolve the sharp edge, which has a curvature facing the exciting O-type stars. The elongated structures are associated with the 3.3 μm polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) emission, the 4.05 μm ionized emission, and the 4.693 μm H<inf>2</inf> emission. However, the PAH-emitting structures are depicted between the other two. The H<inf>2</inf> emission reveals numerous intertwined substructures that are not prominently traced in the 3.3 μm PAH emission. The separation between two substructures in the H<inf>2</inf> emission is ∼1.″1 or 2420 au. The intertwined substructures are traced in the spatial areas associated with the neutral to H<inf>2</inf> transition zone, suggesting the origin of these structures by “thin-shell” instability. Furthermore, an arc-like feature traced in the Spitzer 3.6-8.0 μm images is investigated as a bipolar H ii region (extent ∼0.35 pc) at T <inf> d </inf> ∼25-28 K using the JWST images. A massive-star candidate VPHAS-OB1 #03518 seems to be responsible for the bipolar H ii region.
Publication link
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ad004b
URI
https://d8.irins.org/handle/IITG2025/26589
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