Outflows, envelopes, and disks as evolutionary indicators in Lupus YSOs
M. M. Vazzano, M. Fern\'andez-L\'opez, A. Plunkett, I. de, Gregorio-Monsalvo, A. Santamar\'ia-Miranda, S. Takahashi, C. Lopez

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA observations of Lupus YSOs to evaluate the effectiveness of various outflow and envelope indicators in determining evolutionary stages, revealing limitations in current tracers and the episodic nature of outflows.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of molecular outflows in Lupus YSOs, highlighting the limitations of traditional evolutionary tracers and proposing the need for more detailed observations for accurate classification.
Findings
Outflows exhibit episodic behavior with periods of 50-80 years.
Common tracers are useful broadly but lack granularity for detailed stages.
Pre-stellar and Class 0 sources are identified, but finer distinctions remain challenging.
Abstract
By studying 7 objects in the Lupus clouds we aim to test if a coherence exists between commonly used evolutionary tracers. We present ALMA observations of the continuum and molecular line emission that probe the dense gas and dust of cores and their associated molecular outflows. Our source selection in a common environment allows for a consistent comparison across different evolutionary stages. The quality of the ALMA molecular data allows us to reveal the nature of the molecular outflows by studying their morphology and kinematics. The images in IRAS15398-3359 appear to show that it drives a precessing episodic jet-driven outflow with at least 4 ejections separated by periods of time between 50 and 80 years, while data in IRAS16059-3857 show similarities with a wide-angle wind model also showing signs of being episodic. The outflow of J160115-41523 could be better explain with the…
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