The Herschel HIFI water line survey in the low-mass proto-stellar outflow L1448
G. Santangelo, B. Nisini, T. Giannini, S. Antoniucci, M. Vasta, C., Codella, A. Lorenzani, M. Tafalla, R. Liseau, E. F. van Dishoeck, L. E., Kristensen

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel HIFI observations to analyze water emission in low-mass protostellar outflows, revealing warm, dense gas conditions and chemical variations across shock regions, with implications for shock models.
Contribution
First detailed water line survey of L1448 outflow with Herschel, identifying physical conditions and chemical variations in shock spots.
Findings
Water traces warm, dense gas not seen in other molecules.
Different excitation and line profiles indicate chemical evolution across shocks.
Data favor low velocity J-type shocks over stationary C-shocks.
Abstract
As part of the WISH (Water In Star-forming regions with Herschel) key project, we report on the observations of several ortho- and para-H2O lines performed with the HIFI instrument towards two bright shock spots (R4 and B2) along the outflow driven by the L1448 low-mass proto-stellar system, located in the Perseus cloud. These data are used to identify the physical conditions giving rise to the H2O emission and infer any dependence with velocity. These observations provide evidence that the observed water lines probe a warm (T_kin~400-600 K) and very dense (n 10^6 - 10^7 cm^-3) gas, not traced by other molecules, such as low-J CO and SiO, but rather traced by mid-IR H2 emission. In particular, H2O shows strong differences with SiO in the excitation conditions and in the line profiles in the two observed shocked positions, pointing to chemical variations across the various velocity…
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