Disentangling the jet emission from protostellar systems. The ALMA view of VLA1623
G. Santangelo, N. M. Murillo, B. Nisini, C. Codella, S. Bruderer,, S.-P. Lai, E. F. van Dishoeck

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution ALMA observations to disentangle jet emissions in the protostellar system VLA1623, revealing a fast, collimated jet from source B and providing insights into early protostar evolution.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed analysis of jet morphology and kinematics in VLA1623 using ALMA, highlighting a newly detected jet component associated with source B.
Findings
Detection of a collimated jet from source B
Source B is younger and in an early evolutionary stage
The jet from source B is faster and more collimated
Abstract
Context: High-resolution studies of class 0 protostars represent the key to constraining protostar formation models. VLA16234-2417 represents the prototype of class 0 protostars, and it has been recently identified as a triple non-coeval system. Aim: We aim at deriving the physical properties of the jets in VLA16234-2417 using tracers of shocked gas. Methods: ALMA Cycle 0 Early Science observations of CO(2-1) in the extended configuration are presented in comparison with previous SMA CO(3-2) and Herschel-PACS [OI}] 63 micron observations. Gas morphology and kinematics were analysed to constrain the physical structure and origin of the protostellar outflows. Results: We reveal a collimated jet component associated with the [OI] 63 micron emission at about 8'' (about 960 AU) from source B. This newly detected jet component is inversely oriented with respect to the large-scale outflow…
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