Planck cold clumps in the $\lambda$ Orionis complex: I. Discovery of an extremely young Class 0 protostellar object and a proto-brown dwarf candidate in a bright rimmed clump PGCC G192.32-11.88
Tie Liu, Qizhou Zhang, Kee-Tae Kim, Yuefang Wu, Chang Won Lee,, Jeong-Eun Lee, Kenichi Tatematsu, Minho Choi, Mika Juvela, Mark Thompson,, Paul F. Goldsmith, Sheng-yuan Liu, Hirano Naomi, Patrick Koch, Christian, Henkel, Patricio Sanhueza, JinHua He, Alana Rivera-Ingraham

TL;DR
This study reports the discovery of an extremely young Class 0 protostar and a proto-brown dwarf candidate in a bright rimmed cold clump, revealing insights into early star formation and feedback effects in the $\\lambda$ Orionis complex.
Contribution
First identification of a very young Class 0 protostar and a proto-brown dwarf candidate in a specific PGCC, highlighting the impact of stellar feedback on star formation.
Findings
G192N has the lowest bolometric luminosity among similar sources
G192S is a strong proto-brown dwarf candidate
Star formation efficiency is significantly suppressed in the studied clump
Abstract
We are performing a series of observations with ground-based telescopes toward Planck Galactic cold clumps (PGCCs) in the Orionis complex in order to systematically investigate the effects of stellar feedback. In the particular case of PGCC G192.32-11.88, we discovered an extremely young Class 0 protostellar object (G192N) and a proto-brown dwarf candidate (G192S). G192N and G192S are located in a gravitationally bound bright-rimmed clump. The velocity and temperature gradients seen in line emission of CO isotopologues indicate that PGCC G192.32-11.88 is externally heated and compressed. G192N probably has the lowest bolometric luminosity ( L) and accretion rate (6.3 M~yr) when compared with other young Class 0 sources (e.g. PACS Bright Red sources (PBRs)) in the Orion complex. It has slightly larger internal luminosity…
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