Illuminating evaporating protostellar outflows: ERIS/SPIFFIER reveals the dissociation and ionization of HH 900

Bibliographic Details
Title: Illuminating evaporating protostellar outflows: ERIS/SPIFFIER reveals the dissociation and ionization of HH 900
Authors: Reiter, Megan, Haworth, Thomas J., Manara, Carlo F., Ramsay, Suzanne, Klaassen, Pamela D., Itrich, Dominika, McLeod, Anna F.
Publication Year: 2023
Collection: Astrophysics
Subject Terms: Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies, Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics
More Details: Protostellar jets and outflows are signposts of active star formation. In H II regions, molecular tracers like CO only reveal embedded portions of the outflow. Outside the natal cloud, outflows are dissociated, ionized, and eventually completely ablated, leaving behind only the high-density jet core. Before this process is complete, there should be a phase where the outflow is partially molecular and partially ionized. In this paper, we capture the HH 900 outflow while this process is in action. New observations from the ERIS/SPIFFIER near-IR integral field unit (IFU) spectrograph using the K-middle filter ($\lambda$=2.06-2.34 $\mu$m) reveal H$_2$ emission from the dissociating outflow and Br-$\gamma$ tracing its ionized skin. Both lines trace the wide-angle outflow morphology but H$_2$ only extends $\sim$5000 au into the H II region while Br-$\gamma$ extends the full length of the outflow ($\sim$12,650 au), indicating rapid dissociation of the molecules. H$_2$ has higher velocities further from the driving source, consistent with a jet-driven outflow. Diagnostic line ratios indicate that photoexcitation, not just shocks, contributes to the excitation in the outflow. We argue that HH 900 is the first clear example of an evaporating molecular outflow and predict that a large column of neutral material that may be detectable with ALMA accompanies the dissociating molecules. Results from this study will help guide the interpretation of near-IR images of externally irradiated jets and outflows such as those obtained with the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) in high-mass star-forming regions where these conditions may be common.
Comment: MNRAS, accepted
Document Type: Working Paper
Access URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2310.16943
Accession Number: edsarx.2310.16943
Database: arXiv
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