We present 1-arcmin resolution radio images of the Galactic H ii region NGC 2024 made at 0.33 and 10.55 GHz. These are the highest dynamic range images of the nebula to date. The peak brightness in the 0.33-GHz radio continuum image indicates that the electron temperature is 6800–7600 K. The images clarify the structure of a thermal plume that is directed north from the H ii region and opposite to a unipolar molecular outflow found in the molecular cloud near the H ii region. We report the detection of H91α recombination lines from the plume: these data confirm that the plume is blueshifted relative to the molecular cloud. Finally, we discuss the relative merits of three possible explanations for the plume: that the plume results from the blueshifted counterjet to the CO outflow; that the plume is the continuation of the champagne flow observed in the denser parts of the H ii region; and that the plume is produced by the photoevaporation of molecular clumps apparent in a 13CO map of the region.
A. Rest, R. J. Foley, B. Sinnott, D. L. Welch, Carles Badenes, Alexei V Filippenko, Marcel Bergmann, W. Bhatti, S. Blondin, P. Challis, G. Damke, H. Finley, M. E. Huber, Daniel Kasen, R. Kirshner, T. Matheson, P. A. Mazzali, D. Minniti, R. Nakajima, Gautham Narayan, Knut Olsen, Daniel Sauer, R. C. Smith, N. B. Suntzeff
Clive Oppenheimer, Philip R. Kyle, F. L. Eisele, J. H. Crawford, Greg Huey, David J. Tanner, Saewung Kim, L. Mauldin, Donald R Blake, A. J. Beyersdorf, M. P. Buhr, Doug Davis
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