• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 618
  • 82
  • 67
  • 54
  • 46
  • 37
  • 35
  • 16
  • 9
  • 7
  • 5
  • 5
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • Tagged with
  • 1274
  • 323
  • 174
  • 135
  • 126
  • 112
  • 109
  • 104
  • 92
  • 86
  • 74
  • 71
  • 70
  • 61
  • 60
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
291

Market valuation of certified green homes a case study of Colorado's Built Green and Energy Star programs /

Purdie, Amy Joanne. January 2009 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (MS)--Montana State University--Bozeman, 2009. / Typescript. Chairperson, Graduate Committee: Randal R. Rucker. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 82-86).
292

A history of the Latter-day settlement of Star Valley, Wyoming /

Hall, Ray McCord. January 1962 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)-- Brigham Young University. College of Religious Instruction.
293

A history of the Latter-day settlement of Star Valley, Wyoming

Hall, Ray McCord. January 1962 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--B.Y.U. College of Religious Instruction. / Electronic thesis. Also available in print ed.
294

Constraining the Initial Conditions and Final Outcomes of Accretion Processes around Young Stars and Supermassive Black Holes

Stone, Jordan Michael January 2015 (has links)
In this thesis I discuss probes of small spatial scales around young stars and protostars and around the supermassive black hole at the galactic center. I begin by describing adaptive optics-fed infrared spectroscopic studies of nascent and newborn binary systems. Binary star formation is a significant mode of star formation that could be responsible for the production of a majority of the galactic stellar population. Better characterization of the binary formation mechanism is important for better understanding many facets of astronomy, from proper estimates of the content of unresolved populations, to stellar evolution and feedback, to planet formation. My work revealed episodic accretion onto the more massive component of the pre-main sequence binary system UY Aur. I also showed changes in the accretion onto the less massive component, revealing contradictory indications of the change in accretion rate when considering disk-based and shock-based tracers. I suggested two scenarios to explain the inconsistency. First, increased accretion should alter the disk structure, puffing it up. This change could obscure the accretion shock onto the central star if the disk is highly inclined. Second, if accretion through the disk is impeded before it makes it all the way onto the central star, then increased disk tracers of accretion would not be accompanied by increased shock tracers. In this case mass must be piling up at some radius in the disk, possibly supplying the material for planet formation or a future burst of accretion. My next project focused on characterizing the atmospheres of very low-mass companions to nearby young stars. Whether these objects form in an extension of the binary-star formation mechanism to very low masses or they form via a different process is an open question. Different accretion histories should result in different atmospheric composition, which can be constrained with spectroscopy. I showed that 3-4 μm spectra of a sample of these objects with effective temperatures greater than 1500 K are similar to the spectra of older more massive brown dwarfs at the same temperature, in contrast to objects at 1000 K that exhibit distinct L-band SEDs. The oldest object in my sample of young companions, 50 My old CD-35 2722 B, appears redder than field dwarfs with similar spectral type based on 1-2.5 μm spectra. This could indicate reduced cloud opacity compared to field dwarfs at the same temperature. I also present work to better understand the supermassive blackhole at the center of our Galaxy. Astrometric monitoring of stellar orbits about the blackhole have been used to sketch the gravitational potential, revealing 4 x 10⁶ M_⊙ within a radius of 40 AU. Further constraints on the gravitational potential, and the detection of post-Newtonian effects on the stellar orbits, will require improved astrometric precision. Currently confusion noise in the crowded central cluster limits astrometric precision. Increased spatial resolution can alleviate confusion noise. Dual field phase referencing on large-aperture infrared interferometers provides the sensitivity needed to observe the Galactic center, providing the fastest route to increased spatial resolution. I present simulations of dual-field phase referencing performance with the Keck Interferometer and with the VLTI GRAVITY instrument, to describe the potential contributions each could make to Galactic center stellar astrometry. I demonstrate that the near-future GRAVITY instrument at the VLTI will have a large impact on the ability to precisely track the paths of stars orbiting there, as long as a star with K-band apparent magnitude less than 20 exists within 70 milliarcseconds of the blackhole. Many of the stars orbiting the blackhole are in a post-main sequence wind phase. The wind from these stars is feeding an accretion flow falling onto the blackhole. This flow is radiatively inefficient, producing only 10⁻⁸ times the Eddington limit. Thus our relative proximity to the center of our own Galaxy, provides the opportunity to study a low-luminosity accretion mode that would be difficult or impossible to observe in more remote galaxies. Variable emission from the accretion flow arises from very deep within the flow and could be used to reveal the physics of the accretion process. Characterizing the variability is challenging because all wavelength regimes from radio through X-ray are affected by the process(es) that gives rise to the variations. I report observations of variability at wavelengths that are difficult or challenging to observe from the ground using the SPIRE instrument onboard the Herschel Space Observatory. My work provides the first constraints on the flux of the accretion flow at 250 μm. Variations at 500, 350, and 250 μm observed with Herschel exhibit typical amplitudes similar to the variations observed at 1300 μm from the ground, but the amplitude distribution of flux variations observe with Herschel does not exhibit a tail to large amplitudes that is seen at 1300 μm. This could suggest a connection between large-amplitude mm/submillimeter variations and X-ray activity, since no increased X-ray activity was observed during our Herschel monitoring.
295

Characterizing the Star Forming Properties of Herschel-Detected Gravitationally Lensed Galaxies

Walth, Gregory Lee January 2015 (has links)
Dusty star forming galaxies (DSFGs), characterized by their far-infrared (far-IR) emission, undergo the largest starbursts in the Universe, contributing to the majority of the cosmic star formation rate density at z = 1−4. The Herschel Space Observatory for the first time was able observe the full far-IR dust emission for a large population of high-redshift DSFGs, thereby accurately measuring their star formation rates. With gravitational lensing, we are able to surpass the Herschel confusion limit and probe intrinsically less luminous and therefore more normal star-forming galaxies. With this goal in mind, we have conducted a large Herschel survey, the Herschel Lensing Survey, of the cores of almost 600 massive galaxy clusters, where the effects of gravitational lensing are the strongest. In this thesis, I present follow-up studies of gravitationally lensed Herschel-detected DSFGs by utilizing multi-wavelength data from optical to radio. Specifically, I characterize the star forming properties of gravitationally lensed DSFGs by using these three subsamples: (1) A gravitationally lensed DSFG galaxy at z = 0.6 in one of the most massive galaxy clusters, Abell S1063 (at z = 0.3), (2) One of the brightest sources in HLS, which is a system of two strongly gravitationally lensed galaxies, one at z = 2.0 (optically faint gravitational arc) and the other at z = 4.7 (triply-imaged galaxy), (3) A sample of the brightest sources in HLS at z = 1−4, in which we detect rest-frame optical nebular emission lines (e.g. Hα, Hβ, [OIII]λλ4959,5007) by utilizing near-IR spectroscopy. The main results from these studies are as follows: (1) In the cluster-lensed DSFG at z = 0.6, discovered in the core of Abell S1063, we identify a luminous (SFR = 10 M⊙/yr) giant (D~1 kpc) HII region similar to those typically found at higher redshift (z~2). We show that the HII region is embedded in a rotating disk and likely formed in isolation, rather than through galaxy interaction, which is observed in local galaxies. We can use this source as a nearby laboratory for star forming regions at z ~ 2, in which more detailed follow-up of this source can help us to understand their origin/properties. (2) We discovered that one of the brightest sources in HLS is a blend of two cluster-lensed DSFGs, one at z = 2.0 (an optically faint arc) and the other at z = 4.7 (triply-imaged galaxy), implying that a sample of bright Herschel sources may have such multiplicity. In the z = 2.0 arc, the sub-arcsecond clumps detected in the SMA image surprisingly do not correspond to the clumps in the JVLA CO(1-0) image. When investigating the CO(1-0) velocity structure, there is a substantial amount of molecular gas (likely a molecular wind/outflow) we find that we find is not associated with star formation. This suggests that the CO morphology in DSFGs could be strongly influenced by molecular outflows resulting in the over-prediction of the amount of the molecular gas available for star formation. In the z = 2.0 arc, we also constrain αCO~4. While this value is normal for galaxies like the Milky Way, it is quite unusual for ULIRGs. This hints that the physical conditions may be much different in the arc from other ULIRGs, which usually have αCO ≈ 0.8.(3) We successfully detect rest-frame optical emission lines in 8 gravitationally lensed DSFGs at z = 1−4 using ground-based near-IR spectroscopy with Keck, LBT and Magellan. The luminosities of these lines are substantially less than what the far-IR derived star formation rates predict, suggesting that these DSFGs have large dust attenuations. The difference in the star formation rates is a factor of 30 x (AV= 4), which is larger than previously reported for DSFGs at z > 1. One galaxy (z = 1.5) in the sample showed the largest suppression with a factor of 550x (AV = 7), which is similar to local ULIRGs. Future prospects: Herschel provided a glimpse into the star formation of DSFGs, but only the brightest at z > 2 could be studied in detail without gravitational lensing. ALMA will revolutionize the study of DSFGs with its high spatial resolution submm/mm imaging of their dust continuum and molecular gas, and it will begin to unravel their physical properties. In order to detect nebular emission lines in fainter higher redshift sources, 20-30 meter class telescopes, with next generation near-IR spectrographs, will be necessary. JWST will play a significant role as it will target rest-frame optical nebular emission lines in DSFGs unobtainable from the ground as well as weaker Hydrogen series lines (such as Paschen and Brackett series) to better understand their instantaneous star formation and dust attenuation.
296

A broad-band study of the evolving emission-line properties of galaxies

Ferreira, João Pedro de Jesus January 2018 (has links)
This thesis describes a new approach to the study of high-redshift star-formation and its environments that can be applied to large high-redshift surveys. Instead of relying on spectroscopy or narrow-band photometry to study galaxy line emission in detail, the properties of large emission line galaxy (ELG)populations are estimated from broadband photometry by measuring colour-residuals against colours drawn from a set of line-free stochastic burst models-based on (Bruzual & Charlot, 2003). Simulated star-formation histories drawn from semi-analytic and adaptive-mesh-refinement codes were converted into mock galaxy colours, but neither could-span the range of observed galaxy colours at high redshift. Instead, an existing set of exponentially declining star-formation models with stochastic bursts was used, because it closely spanned the range in observed galaxy colours in the bandsthat were line-free at each redshift. Small colour offsets were measured between the models and the observations, corresponding to the equivalent widths (EWs)of Hα, [OIII] and [OII]. In this way, I measure the rest-frame Equivalent Widths of the Hα, [OIII]and [OII] emission lines as they are redshifted through all filters from CANDELS(near-continuous U to 4.5μm coverage) for a large sample of galaxies from z=0.1up to z=5. This approach relies solely on the line-free models, a set of existing reliable photometric redshifts, and a colour cut (B−K < 2 or equivalent) to select only the dust-free young objects (the majority of identified emission-line galaxies). Once correctly identified, I apply this method to the CANDELS-UDS photometry to characterise the properties of Emission-Line Galaxies (ELGs) through these lines. I find that in this sample the Hα and [OIII] ELG fraction with EW > 150Årises from < 5% at z < 1 up to 40% at z > 2. The co-moving ELG density rises from 5 to 30 ×10 −4 /Mpc −3 at z=2.3. The evolution of median Hα EW with redshift is consistent with results from HiZELS and 3D-HST yielding median EW ∼ M 0.25 (1+z) 1.75 up to z=2.3, from which it departs to values of 450Å atz=4.3. [OIII] remains weaker than Hα for z < 3 and matches its values above that redshift. [OIII] also displays a larger fraction of extreme EWs than Hα. [OII], while correctly identified, never becomes as extreme as the other two lines lines, even when corrected for the evolving continuum. This is evidence of an increasing [OIII]/[OII] ratio with increasing z through-out this sample. While these results agree with spectroscopic and narrow-band surveys, the use of the deeper broadband filter coverage enables a systematic measurement of the increasingly prevalent high EWs ( > 500Å) in galaxies at every redshift spanning the 10 8 to 10 10.5 M range. Subsequently, this method was applied to all the other CANDELS fields (GOODS-South and North, COSMOS and EGS) and further corroborates these results. These results further show that EW dependence on mass is steeper for [OIII] than for Hα. Line EWs are then converted into luminosities for the three lines and fitting formulas are obtained, displaying L Hα ∼(1+z) 3.2 M 0.45−0.6log(1+z), with similar results for the other lines. L Hα is converted into star-formation rate and specific star-formation rate (sSFR). sSFR at low-z aligns approximately with the main sequence (with a steeper dependence in mass), but at high-redshift sSFR remains above the main sequence by a factor of 2 and rising towards medians SFR=100/Gyr around log(M/M )=9, showing a departure of the main sequence of star formation at lower masses log(M/M ) < 9.5. The SFRD of ELGs is 1% at low redshift, but rises to 30% at z=4.5. The L [OIII] /L Hα ratio is used to estimate L [OIII] /L Hβ and the ionization parameter q, for which the median atz > 0.5 stays approximately constant at 10 8 cm/s, and increases with mass. Using the L [OIII] /L [OII] ratio and q, median metallicity is shown to be sub-solar, and can be tentatively estimated for z > 0.5 to be Z/Z ∼0.3. The errors are large, but this could also mean a large range in metallicity from Z to 0.1Z . L [OIII] /L [OII] rises with sSFR as shown in the literature. This method shows great potential to survey emission-line-derived physical quantities for large galaxy populations with a low computational footprint, which could be particularly useful for pixel-by-pixel EW imaging. It is also flexibile, which allows it to be applied to any future deep multi-broadband fields.
297

High-precision time-domain astrophysics in crowded star-fields with ground based telescopes : globular clusters and the mitigation of the atmospheric turbulence

Figuera Jaimes, Roberto Jose January 2018 (has links)
We carried out a three year (2013-2015) observational campaign at the Danish 1.54-m Telescope at the ESO observatory at La Silla in Chile in which we obtained ~1000 astronomical images in the field of 11 Galactic globular clusters. The selection of these stellar systems was focused mainly on the visibility of the targets and their relevant physical properties available in the catalogues, among them were considered the density, variable stars known, colour-magnitude diagrams, and luminosity. The telescope was equipped with an electron-multiplying CCD (EMCCD) with the aim of taking very short exposure-time images. The camera was configured to take 10 frames per second. Due to this, the brighter stars observed were not affected by saturation, it helped to give higher signal to noise ratio to the fainter stars and, importantly, it minimised the effects of the atmospheric turbulence such as blending between stars in the crowded fields. To produce normal-exposure-time images (minutes) we implemented the shift-and-add technique that also enabled us to produce images with better angular resolution than previously achieved with conventional CCDs on ground-based telescopes, and even enabled us to produce images with angular resolution close to that obtained with space telescopes. The detection of the stars in each of the globular clusters and the photometry was performed via difference image analysis by using the DanDIA pipeline whose procedures and mathematical techniques have been demonstrated to produce high-precision time-series photometry of very crowded stellar regions. We produced time-series photometry for ~15000 stars in the fields observed which were statistically analysed in order to automatically extract variable stars. Our aim is to complete, or improve, the census of the variable star population in the globular clusters. In NGC 6715, we found light curves for 17 previously known variable stars near the edges of our reference image (16 RR Lyrae and 1 semi-regular) and we discovered 67 new variables (30 RR Lyrae, 21 long-period irregular, 3 semi-regular, 1 W Virginis, 1 eclipsing binary, and 11 unclassified). This cluster was particularly interesting because apart from the results obtained, it shows the benefits of using the EMCCD cameras and the shift-and-add technique. It is a cluster studied several times including data obtained with the OGLE survey and also with the Hubble Space Telescope and our discoveries were still new. Our new RR Lyrae star discoveries help confirm that NGC 6715 is of intermediate Oosterhoff type. In the other 10 globular clusters, we obtained light curves for 31 previously known variable stars (3 L, 2 SR, 20 RR Lyrae, 1 SX Phe, 3 cataclysmic variables, 1 EW and 1 NC) and we discovered 30 new variables (16 L, 7 SR, 4 RR Lyrae, 1 SX Phe and 2 NC). In NGC 6093, we analysed the famous case of the 1860 Nova, for which no observations of the Nova in outburst have been made until the present study. Ephemerides and photometric measurements for the variable stars are available in electronic form through the Strasbourg Astronomical Data Centre.
298

Possible Counterparts of IceCube High Energy Neutrinos

January 2015 (has links)
abstract: The IceCube Neutrino Observatory has provided the first map of the high energy (~0.01 – 1 PeV) sky in neutrinos. Since neutrinos propagate undeflected, their arrival direction is an important identifier for sources of high energy particle acceleration. Reconstructed arrival directions are consistent with an extragalactic origin, with possibly a galactic component, of the neutrino flux. We present a statistical analysis of positional coincidences of the IceCube neutrinos with known astrophysical objects from several catalogs. For the brightest gamma-ray emitting blazars and for Seyfert galaxies, the numbers of coincidences is consistent with the random, or “null”, distribution. Instead, when considering starburst galaxies with the highest flux in gamma-rays and infrared radiation, up to n = 8 coincidences are found, representing an excess over the ~4 predicted for the null distribution. The probability that this excess is realized in the null case, the p-value, is p = 0.042. This value falls to p = 0.003 for a set of gamma-ray detected starburst galaxies and superbubbles in the galactic neighborhood. Therefore, it is possible that these might account for a subset of IceCube neutrinos. The physical plausibility of such correlation is discussed briefly. / Dissertation/Thesis / Masters Thesis Astrophysics 2015
299

Antropologia da ficção científica : alteridade maquínica em Star Treck: voyager

Busch, Willian Perpétuo January 2016 (has links)
Orientador: Prof. Dr. Miguel Alfredo Carid Naveira / Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Federal do Paraná, Setor de Ciências Humanas, Programa de Pós-Graduação em Antropologia Social. Defesa: Curitiba, 13/10/2016 / Inclui referências : f. 307-318 / Resumo: A ficção científica pode ser entendida como uma forma antropológica de pensamento sobre a alteridade. Nesta dissertação aborda-se esta relação tendo como foco a série televisiva de Star Trek: Voyager. Para tal é realizada uma imersão no percurso filosófico do conceito de alteridade e da invenção da filosofia e, posteriormente, do pensamento antropológico, como formas de ficção sobre o Outro. Construindo uma etnografia pautada na interação entre indivíduos e máquinas, entendeu-se que estas últimas ocupavam o espaço de uma alteridade radicalmente outra, dado seu desposicionamento relacional. Uma vez que este esquema foi demarcado, entendeu-se que a ficção científica em questão era responsável por apresentar duas perspectivas ontológicas diferentes. Uma delas é o que chamei de ontologia da individualidade que existe nos mais variados coletivos humanoides de Star Trek. A outra, em oposição, é aparentemente exclusiva dos Borg e se constitui como uma ontologia da assimilação, na qual o conceito de individualidade, bem como sociedade, não pode ser pensado. Palavras-Chave: Antropologia da Ficção Científica, Star Trek, Ontologias e Indivíduos / Abstract: The science fiction could be understood as a type of anthropological thinking about the alterity. In this dissertation we aim to understand this relation by focusing in the TV Show Star Trek: Voyager. To do that we create a type of reflexion about the philosophical thinking on the concept of alterity and also the invention of philosophy itself. And later in the antropological thinking, as kinds of fiction about the Other. Our grounding is an etnography where we focus on the interation between individuals and machines. The later as a type of radical alterity completely alien to the notion of individual. After this scheme has been created, we understood that the science fiction is based on two kinds of ontological perspectives. The first is the ontology of the individual, mutual for different types of humanoids and their societies in Star Trek. The other is exclusively for the Borg as it is based in the notion of assimilation. Key words: Anthopology of Science Fiction, Star Trek, Ontologies, Individuals
300

Modélisation de la chimie dans les régions de formation d'étoiles massives avec des PDRs internes / Modeling chemistry in high-mass star-forming regions with internal PDRs

Stephán, Gwendoline 04 November 2016 (has links)
Les conditions menant à la formation des étoiles massives sont toujours étudiées mais un scénario de leur évolution a été avancé : lors de l’effondrement d’un coeur froid pré-stellaire sous l’effet de la gravité, le milieu se réchauffe et entre ainsi dans la phase de coeur chaud moléculaire (CCM). La proto-étoile centrale en formation accrète de la matière, augmentant sa masse et sa luminosité, et finalement devient suffisamment évoluée pour émettre des photons UV qui irradient l’entourage de l’étoile formant ainsi une région HII hypercompact (HC), puis une région HII ultracompact (UC). À ce stade, une région de photo-dissociation (PDR) se forme entre la région HII et le coeur moléculaire. La composition chimique du milieu nous permet de connaître les processus physiques ayant lieu pendant les différentes phases de la formation des étoiles. De plus, la chimie nous permet également de déterminer le stade de l’évolution d’un objet astrophysique par l’utilisation de codes chimiques incluant l’évolution temporelle de la température et du champ de rayonnement. Jusqu’à présent, peu d’études ont examiné les PDRs internes et cela a été uniquement en présence d’une cavité formée par un écoulement (appelé ici outflow) de matière depuis les pôles de la proto-étoile vers le milieu environnant. La connaissance de ces régions uniques autour des régions HII hypercompact et ultracompact restent donc à approfondir. Ma thèse de doctorat se concentre sur l’évolution spatio-temporelle de la chimie dans les régions HII hypercompact et ultracompact avec des PDRs internes aussi bien que dans les coeurs chauds moléculaires. Le but de cette étude est, premièrement, de comprendre l’impact et les effets sur la chimie du champ de rayonnement, en général très fort dans ces régions. Deuxièmement, le but est d’étudier l’émission de diverses espèces spécifiques aux régions HII HC/UC et de comparer cette émission à celle des CCMs, où le champ de rayonnement UV n’a pas d’influence car il est immédiatement atténué par le milieu. En fin de compte nous voulons déterminer l’âge d’une région donnée en utilisant la chimie associée au transfert radiatif. Pour étudier ces stades transitoires de la formation des étoiles massives, nous utilisons le code astrochimique Saptarsy optimisé et amélioré pendant cette thèse de doctorat. Saptarsy est un code gaz-grain calculant l’évolution spatio-temporelle d’abondances relatives. Il est basé sur l’approche des équations des taux de réactions et utilise le réseau chimique OSU (Université de l’État de l’Ohio) mis à jour. De plus, Saptarsy est couplé au code de transfert radiatif RADMC-3D via un programme, basé sur le langage Python, nommé Pandora. Ceci est fait afin d’obtenir des spectres synthétiques directement comparables avec des observations en utilisant l’évolution spatio-temporelle détaillée des abondances chimiques.En plus de la comparaison entre un modèle de région HII HC/UC avec un modèle de CCM, nous obtenons des modèles pour des tailles différentes de régions HII, pour plusieurs densités au front d’ionisation et pour deux profils de densité. Nous étudions les abondances qui dépendent de manière critique des conditions initiales et nous explorons aussi l’importance de l’émission venant de l’enveloppe pour diverses espèces chimiques. Nous constatons que parmi la douzaine d’espèces que nous avons étudiées seulement quatre d’entre elles sont spécifiques à la phase de région HII ou à la phase de coeur chaud. Ces espèces sont C+ et O pour la première phase et CH3OH et H218O pour la deuxième phase. Cependant, un plus grand nombre d’espèces pourrait être utilisées pour étudier et identifier ces phases. / Conditions leading to the formation of high-mass stars are still under investigation but an evolutionary scenario has been proposed: As a cold pre-stellar core collapses under gravitational force, the medium warms up and enters the hot molecular core (HMC) phase. The forming central proto-star accretes materials, increasing its mass and luminosity and eventually it becomes sufficiently evolved to emit UV photons which irradiate the surrounding environment forming a hyper compact (HC) and then a ultracompact (UC) HII region. At this stage, a very dense and very thin internal photon-dominated region (PDR) forms between the HII region and the molecular core.Information on the chemistry allows to trace the physical processes occurring in these different phases of star formation. Therefore, chemistry also allows the determination of the evolutionary stage of astrophysical objects through the use of chemical models including the time evolution of the temperature and radiation field. So far, few studies have investigated internal PDRs and only in the presence of outflows cavities. Thus, these unique regions around HC/UCHII regions remain to be examined thoroughly.My PhD thesis focuses on the spatio-temporal chemical evolution in HC/UC HII regions with internal PDRs as well as in HMCs. The purpose of this study is first to understand the impact and effects of the radiation field, usually very strong in these regions, on the chemistry. Secondly, the goal is to study the emission of various tracers of HC/UCHII regions and compare it with HMCs models, where the UV radiation field does not impact the region as it is immediately attenuated by the medium. Ultimately we want to determine the age of a given region using chemistry in combination with radiative transfer. To investigate these transient phases of massive star formation, we use the astrochemical code Saptarsy optimized and improved during this PhD thesis. Saptarsy is a gas-grain code computing the spatio-temporal evolution of relative abundances. It is based on the rate equation approach and uses an updated Ohio State University (OSU) chemical network. Moreover, Saptarsy works along with the radiative transfer code RADMC-3D via a Python based program named Pandora. This is done in order to obtain synthetic spectra directly comparable to observations using the detailed spatio-temporal evolution of species abundances.In addition to comparing a HC/UCHII region to a HMC model, we obtain models for different sizes of HII regions, for various densities at the ionization front and for two different density profiles. We investigate the critical dependance of the abundances on the initial conditions and we also explore the importance of the emission coming from the envelope for various species. We find that among the dozen of molecules and atoms we have studied only four of them trace the UC/HCHII region phase or the HMC phase. They are C+ and O for the first and CH3OH and H218O for the second phase. However, more species could be studied to probe and identify these phases.

Page generated in 0.041 seconds