ALMA Survey of Orion Planck Galactic Cold Clumps (ALMASOP): Evidence for a Molecular Jet Launched at an Unprecedented Early Phase of Protostellar Evolution
Abstract
Protostellar outflows and jets play a vital role in star formation as they carry away excess angular momentum from the inner disk surface, allowing the material to be transferred toward the central protostar. Theoretically, low-velocity and poorly collimated outflows appear from the beginning of the collapse at the first hydrostatic core (FHSC) stage. With growing protostellar core mass, high-density jets are launched, entraining an outflow from the infalling envelope. Until now, molecular jets have been observed at high velocity (≳100 km s-1) in early Class 0 protostars. We, for the first time, detect a dense molecular jet in SiO emission with low velocity (~4.2 km s-1, deprojected ~24 km s-1) from source G208.89-20.04Walma (hereafter G208Walma) using ALMA Band 6 observations. This object has some characteristics of FHSCs, such as a small outflow/jet velocity, extended 1.3 mm continuum emission, and N 2D+ line emission. Additional characteristics, however, are typical of early protostars: collimated outflow and SiO jet. The full extent of the outflow corresponds to a dynamical timescale of ~ ${930}_{-100}^{+200}$ yr. The spectral energy distribution also suggests a very young source having an upper limit of T bol ~ 31 K and L bol ~ 0.8 L ⊙. We conclude that G208Walma is likely in the transition phase from FHSC to protostar, and the molecular jet has been launched within a few hundred years of initial collapse. Therefore, G208Walma may be the earliest object discovered in the protostellar phase with a molecular jet.
- Publication:
-
The Astrophysical Journal
- Pub Date:
- June 2022
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:2204.06661
- Bibcode:
- 2022ApJ...931..130D
- Keywords:
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- Star formation;
- Low mass stars;
- Stellar jets;
- Stellar winds;
- Protostars;
- Astrochemistry;
- Stellar mass loss;
- Stellar evolution;
- Young stellar objects;
- Early stellar evolution;
- 1569;
- 2050;
- 1607;
- 1636;
- 1302;
- 75;
- 1613;
- 1599;
- 1834;
- 434;
- Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies
- E-Print:
- 16 pages, 7 figures. accepted for publication in ApJ