Publication | Open Access
A Multiwavelength Study of M17: The Spectral Energy Distribution and PAH Emission Morphology of a Massive Star Formation Region
183
Citations
43
References
2007
Year
PhotometryMultiwavelength StudyEngineeringHigh-energy AstrophysicsPhysicsPah Emission MorphologyDiffuse Emission PhotometryNatural SciencesM17 ComplexAstrochemistryAstrophysical PlasmaAstronomical Image AnalysisAstrophysical SimulationSpectral Energy DistributionSynchrotron RadiationPah Destruction EdgeAstrophysics
We combine diffuse emission photometry from GLIMPSE and several other Galactic plane surveys covering near-IR through radio wavelengths to synthesize a global spectral energy distribution (SED) for the M17 complex. By balancing the integrated flux in the SED with the total bolometric luminosity of all known O and early B stars in the ionizing cluster, we estimate a distance to M17 of 1.6 kpc. At this distance, the observed total flux in the SED corresponds to a luminosity of 2.4 ± 0.3 × 106 L☉. We find that the SED from the H II region peaks at shorter wavelengths and has a qualitatively different shape than the SED from the photodissociation region (PDR). We find that polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are destroyed over a short distance or edge at the boundary of the H II region. We demonstrate that this PAH destruction edge can be located easily using GLIMPSE band-ratio images and confirm this using Spitzer IRS spectra. We investigate the relative roles of extreme ultraviolet (EUV) and X-ray photons in the destruction of PAHs, concluding that X-rays are not an important PAH destruction mechanism in M17 or, by extension, in any other Galactic H II region. Our results support the hypothesis that PAHs are destroyed by EUV photons within H II regions. PAHs dominate the mid-IR emission in the neutral PDR beyond the ionized gas.
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