Herschel PACS observations of shocked gas associated with the jets of L1448 and L1157
G. Santangelo, B. Nisini, S. Antoniucci, C. Codella, S. Cabrit, T., Giannini, G. Herczeg, R. Liseau, M. Tafalla, E.F. van Dishoeck

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel PACS observations to analyze shock-induced gas excitation in protostellar outflows L1448 and L1157, revealing complex multi-component shock structures and molecular emission correlations.
Contribution
It provides a detailed multi-line excitation analysis of shock regions, identifying distinct warm and hot gas components and their association with different shock types.
Findings
Identification of two gas components: warm (~450 K) and hot (~1100 K).
Detection of spatially coincident H2O, OH, [OI], and high-J CO emissions.
Evidence for both dissociative and non-dissociative shocks in the regions.
Abstract
In the framework of the WISH key program, several H2O (E_u>190 K), high-J CO, [OI], and OH transitions are mapped with PACS in two shock positions along the two prototypical low-luminosity outflows L1448 and L1157. Previous HIFI H2O observations (E_u=53-249 K) and complementary Spitzer mid-IR H2 data are also used, with the aim of deriving a complete picture of the excitation conditions. At all selected spots a close spatial association between H2O, mid-IR H2, and high-J CO emission is found, whereas the low-J CO emission traces either entrained ambient gas or a remnant of an older shock. The excitation analysis at L1448-B2 suggests that a two-component model is needed to reproduce the H2O, CO, and mid-IR H2 lines: an extended warm component (T~450 K) is traced by the H2O emission with E_u =53-137 K and by the CO lines up to J=22-21, and a compact hot component (T=1100 K) is traced by…
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