Spitzer spectral line mapping of the HH211 outflow
O. Dionatos, B. Nisini, S. Cabrit, L. Kristensen, G. Pineau des, Forets

TL;DR
This study uses Spitzer spectral mapping to analyze the HH211 outflow, revealing a cool molecular component, an embedded atomic jet, and insights into shock conditions and elemental depletion.
Contribution
First spectral mapping of HH211's outflow detects a cool H2 component and an embedded atomic jet, providing new insights into jet composition and shock processes.
Findings
Detected cool H2 component at ~300 K consistent with CO data
First evidence of an embedded atomic jet traced to the source
Iron and silicon are depleted by a factor of 10-50
Abstract
Aims: We employ archival Spitzer slit-scan observations of the HH211 outflow in order to investigate its warm gas content, assess the jet mass flux in the form of H2 and probe for the existence of an embedded atomic jet. Methods: Detected molecular and atomic lines are interpreted by means of emission line diagnostics and an existing grid of molecular shock models. The physical properties of the warm gas are compared against other molecular jet tracers and to the results of a similar study towards the L1448-C outflow. Results: We have detected and mapped the v=0-0 S(0) - S(7) H2 lines and fine-structure lines of S, Fe+, and Si+. H2 is detected down to 5" from the source and is characterized by a "cool" T~300K and a "warm" T~1000 K component, with an extinction Av ~ 8 mag. The amount of cool H2 towards the jet agrees with that estimated from CO assuming fully molecular gas. The warm…
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