Episodic molecular outflow in the very young protostellar cluster Serpens South
Adele L. Plunkett, Hector G. Arce, Diego Mardones, Pieter van Dokkum,, Michael M. Dunham, Manuel Fernandez-Lopez, Jose Gallardo, Stuartt A. Corder

TL;DR
This study presents clear evidence of episodic outflows from a very young protostar in a clustered environment, highlighting early-stage accretion and outflow dynamics crucial for star formation and turbulence regulation.
Contribution
It is the first to demonstrate episodic outflows from a Class 0 protostar within a dense cluster environment, linking early accretion events to outflow activity.
Findings
22 distinct outflow ejecta features identified
Outflow shows bipolar lobes originating from continuum peak
Evidence of rotation and infall in surrounding envelope
Abstract
The loss of mass from protostars, in the form of a jet or outflow, is a necessary counterpart to protostellar mass accretion. Outflow ejection events probably vary in their velocity and/or in the rate of mass loss. Such `episodic' ejection events have been observed during the Class 0 protostellar phase (the early accretion stage), and continue during the subsequent class I phase that marks the first one million years of star formation. Previously observed episodic-ejection sources were relatively isolated; however, the most common sites of star formation are clusters. Outflows link protostars with their environment and provide a viable source of turbulence that is necessary for regulating star formation in clusters, but it is not known how an accretion-driven jet or outflow in a clustered environment manifests itself in its earliest stage. This early stage is important in establishing…
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