Abstract
We have used the Japanese VLBI array VERA to perform high-precision astrometry of an H2O maser source in the Galactic star-forming region NGC 281 West, which has been considered to be part of a 300-pc superbubble. We successfully detected a trigonometric parallax of 0.355 ± 0.030 mas, corresponding to a source distance of 2.82±0.24 kpc. Our direct distance determination of NGC 281 has resolved a large distance discrepancy between previous photometric and kinematic studies; likely NGC 281 is in the far side of the Perseus spiral arm. The source distance as well as the absolute proper motions were used to demonstrate the 3D structure and expansion of the NGC 281 superbubble, ∼ 650 pc in size parallel to the Galactic disk and with a shape slightly elongated along the disk or spherical, but not vertically elongated, indicating that the superbubble expansion may be confined to the disk. We estimate the expansion velocity of the superbubble as being ∼ 20 kms 1, both perpendicular to and parallel to the Galactic disk with a consistent timescale of ∼ 20 Myr. © 2008. Astronomical Society of Japan.
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Sato, M., Hirota, T., Honma, M., Kobayashi, H., Sasao, T., Bushimata, T., … Yamashita, K. (2008). Distance to NGC 281 in a Galactic fragmenting superbubble: Parallax measurements with VERA. Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan, 60(5), 975–989. https://doi.org/10.1093/pasj/60.5.975
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