H$_2$ mass-velocity relationship from 3D numerical simulations of jet-driven molecular outflows
Adriano Cerqueira, Bertrand Lefloch, Alejandro Esquivel, Pedro, Rivera-Ortiz, Claudio Codella, Cecilia Ceccarelli, Linda Podio

TL;DR
This study uses 3D simulations to show that the mass-velocity distribution in jet-driven protostellar outflows follows an exponential law, with contributions from both swept-up ambient gas and jet-entrained material, aligning with recent observations.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the exponential mass-velocity relationship arises naturally from jet-driven outflow dynamics, emphasizing the role of entrained material and providing a detailed physical explanation.
Findings
Mass-velocity distribution fits an exponential law when jet contribution is excluded.
The exponential parameter v_0 remains nearly constant over time and space.
The model reproduces observed CO intensity-velocity relationships in protostellar outflows.
Abstract
Previous numerical studies have shown that in protostellar outflows, the mass-velocity distribution can be well described by a broken power law . On the other hand, recent observations of a sample of outflows show that the CO intensity-velocity distribution, closely related to , follows an exponential law . In the present work, we revisit the physical origin of the mass-velocity relationship in jet-driven protostellar outflows. We investigate the respective contributions of the different regions of the outflow, from the swept-up ambient gas to the jet. We performed 3D numerical simulations of a protostellar jet propagating into a molecular cloud using the hydrodynamical code Yguazu-a. The code takes into account atomic and ionic species and was modified to include the H gas. We find that by excluding the jet…
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