Detection of a dense SiO jet in the evolved protostellar phase
Somnath Dutta, Chin-Fei Lee, Doug Johnstone, Tie Liu, Naomi Hirano,, Sheng-Yuan Liu, Jeong-Eun Lee, Hsien Shang, Ken'ichi Tatematsu, Kee-Tae Kim,, Dipen Sahu, Patricio Sanhueza, James Di Francesco, Kai-Syun Jhan, Chang Won, Lee, Woojin Kwon, Shanghuo Li, Leonardo Bronfman

TL;DR
This study reports the detection of a dense SiO jet from a late-stage Class I protostar, suggesting it is still in a high accretion phase similar to earlier protostellar stages, challenging previous assumptions about jet evolution.
Contribution
First detection of a dense SiO jet in a Class I protostellar system, indicating ongoing high accretion activity at this evolutionary stage.
Findings
G205S3 exhibits a dense SiO jet with high mass-loss rate.
G205S3's properties resemble those of early-stage Class 0 objects.
The source is likely in a late high-accretion phase of Class I.
Abstract
Jets and outflows trace the accretion history of protostars. High-velocity molecular jets have been observed from several protostars in the early Class\,0 phase of star formation, detected with the high-density tracer SiO. Until now, no clear jet has been detected with SiO emission from isolated evolved Class\,I protostellar systems. We report a prominent dense SiO jet from a Class\,I source G205S3 (HOPS\,315: T 180 K, spectral index 0.417), with a moderately high mass-loss rate ( 0.59 10 M yr) estimated from CO emission. Together, these features suggest that G205S3 is still in a high accretion phase, similar to that expected of Class\,0 objects. We compare G205S3 to a representative Class\,0 system G206W2 (HOPS\,399) and literature Class\,0/I sources to explore the possible explanations behind the SiO emission seen at the later…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies
