A differentially rotating disc in a high-mass protostellar system
/ Authors
/ Abstract
Context. A strong signature of a circumstellar disc around a high-mass protostar has been inferred from high resolution methanol maser observations in NGC 7538-IRS1 N. This interpretation has however been challenged, with a bipolar outflow proposed as an alternative explanation. Aims. We compare the two proposed scenarios for best consistency with the observations. Methods. Using a newly developed formalism, we model the optical depth of the maser emission at each observed point in the map and LOS velocity for the two scenarios. Results. We find that if the emission is symmetric around a central peak in both space and LOS velocity, then it has to arise from an edge-on disc with sufficiently fast differential rotation. Disc models successfully fit ∼100 independent measurement points in position-velocity space with 4 free parameters to an overall accuracy of 3−4%. Solutions for Keplerian rotation require a central mass of at least 4 M� . Close to best-fitting models are obtained if Keplerian motion is assumed around a central mass equaling ∼30 M� , as inferred from other observations. In contrast, we find that classical bipolar outflow models cannot fit the data, although it could be applicable in other sources. Conclusions. Our results strongly favour the differentially rotating disc hypothesis to describe the main feature of the 12.2 (and 6.7 GHz
Journal: Astronomy and Astrophysics