Characterizing the Youngest Herschel-detected Protostars II. Molecular Outflows from the Millimeter and the Far-infrared
John J. Tobin (Leiden/NRAO), Amelia M. Stutz (MPIA), P.Manoj (Tata, Inst.), S. Thomas Megeath (Toledo), Agata Karska (Nicolaus Copernicus U.),, Zsofia Nagy (Toledo), Friedrich Wyrowski (MPIfR), William Fischer, (Toledo/Goddard), Dan M. Watson (Rochester), Thomas Stanke (ESO)

TL;DR
This study uses millimeter and far-infrared observations to analyze molecular outflows from the youngest, deeply embedded protostars in Orion, revealing their outflow properties, morphologies, and temperature characteristics.
Contribution
It provides new observational data on outflows from extremely young protostars, linking outflow features with envelope density and inclination effects.
Findings
Outflows detected in 8 of 14 protostars, with varied morphologies.
Outflows are consistent with intermediate inclination angles.
Detected CO and H2O lines indicate high envelope densities and cooler temperatures.
Abstract
We present CARMA CO (J=1-0) observations and Herschel PACS spectroscopy, characterizing the outflow properties toward extremely young and deeply embedded protostars in the Orion molecular clouds. The sample comprises a subset of the Orion protostars known as the PACS Bright Red Sources (PBRS) (Stutz et al. 2013). We observed 14 PBRS with CARMA and 8 of these 14 with Herschel, acquiring full spectral scans from 55 micron to 200 micron. Outflows are detected in CO (J=1-0) from 8 of 14 PBRS, with two additional tentative detections; outflows are also detected from the outbursting protostar HOPS 223 (V2775 Ori) and the Class I protostar HOPS 68. The outflows have a range of morphologies, some are spatially compact, <10000 AU in extent, while others extend beyond the primary beam. The outflow velocities and morphologies are consistent with being dominated by intermediate inclination angles…
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