A multi-wavelength study of a double intermediate-mass protostar - from large-scale structure to collimated jets
Jan Forbrich, Thomas Stanke, Randolf Klein, Thomas Henning, Karl M., Menten, Katharina Schreyer, Bettina Posselt

TL;DR
This study reveals a double intermediate-mass protostar system with energetic outflows, jets, and high accretion rates, providing insights into early star formation stages in a complex, chemically primitive environment.
Contribution
First detailed multi-wavelength analysis of a double intermediate-mass protostar with associated jets and outflows, highlighting early evolutionary stage characteristics.
Findings
Discovered two protostellar objects with high masses and accretion rates.
Detected intersecting jets and a molecular outflow with a short dynamical timescale.
Found absence of hot-core chemistry and radio emission, indicating an early stage.
Abstract
(abridged) We study a previously discovered protostellar source that is deeply embedded and drives an energetic molecular outflow. The source, UYSO1, is located close to IRAS 07029-1215 at a distance of ~1 kpc. The multi-wavelength observations resulted in the detection of a double intermediate-mass protostar at the location of UYSO1. In addition to the associated molecular outflow, with a projected size of 0.25 pc, two intersecting near-infrared jets with projected sizes of 0.4 pc and 0.2 pc were found. However, no infrared counterparts to the driving sources could be detected in sensitive near- to far-infrared observations. In interferometric millimeter observations, UYSO1 was resolved into two continuum sources with high column densities and gas masses of 3.5 Mo and 1.2 Mo, with a linear separation of 4200 AU. We report the discovery of a H2O maser toward one of the two sources. The…
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