Herschel/PACS observations of young sources in Taurus: the far-infrared counterpart of optical jets
L. Podio, I. Kamp, D. Flower, C. Howard, G. Sandell, A. Mora, G., Aresu, S. Brittain, W. F. R. Dent, C. Pinte, G. J. White

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel/PACS far-infrared observations to analyze atomic and molecular emissions from jets in young stellar objects in Taurus, revealing how cooling processes and outflow activity evolve from Class 0 to Class II stages.
Contribution
First detailed comparison of FIR line emission with optical jets and models across different evolutionary stages of young stars.
Findings
Atomic lines are associated with extended emission aligned with jets.
Molecular emission originates from compact regions, likely shocks or heated outflow cavities.
Cooling and outflow activity decrease significantly from Class 0 to Class II sources.
Abstract
Observations of the atomic and molecular line emission associated with jets and outflows emitted by young stellar objects can be used to trace the various evolutionary stages they pass through as they evolve to become main sequence stars. To understand the relevance of atomic and molecular cooling in shocks, and how accretion and ejection efficiency evolves with the source evolutionary state, we will study the far-infrared counterparts of bright optical jets associated with Class I and II sources in Taurus (T Tau, DG Tau A, DG Tau B, FS Tau A+B, and RW Aur). We have analysed Herschel/PACS observations of a number of atomic ([OI]63um, 145um, [CII]158um) and molecular (high-J CO, H2O, OH) lines, collected within the OTKP GASPS. To constrain the origin of the detected lines we have compared the FIR emission maps with the emission from optical-jets and millimetre-outflows, and the line…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena
