The molecular gas content of the Pipe Nebula I. Direct evidence of outflow-generated turbulence in B59?
A. Duarte-Cabral, A. Chrysostomou, N. Peretto, G. A. Fuller, B., Matthews, G. Schieven, and G. R. Davis

TL;DR
This study provides direct observational evidence that protostellar outflows in the B59 region of the Pipe Nebula contribute to local turbulence and influence the surrounding dense gas, affecting star formation processes.
Contribution
It offers the first detailed analysis of outflow impacts on a quiescent, low-mass star-forming region, highlighting outflows as key in sustaining turbulence and regulating collapse.
Findings
Outflows increase local line widths and excitation temperatures.
Less than half of outflow energy converts into turbulence.
Outflows influence the morphology and dynamics of dense gas.
Abstract
The Pipe Nebula is a molecular cloud hosting the B59 region as its only active star-forming clump. While the particular importance of outflows in active star forming regions is subject of debate, the quiet nature of the gas in B59 makes it a good site to directly see the impact of protostellar feedback on the quiescent dense gas. Using HARP at the JCMT, we mapped the B59 region with the J=3-2 transition of 12CO to study the kinematics and energetics of the outflows, and 13CO and C18O to study the overall dynamics of the ambient cloud, the physical properties of the gas, and the hierarchical structure of the region. The B59 region has a total of 30Msun of cold and quiescent material, mostly gravitationally bound, with narrow line widths throughout. Such low levels of turbulence in non-star-forming sites of B59 are indicative of the intrinsic initial conditions of the cloud. On the other…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science
