NIR jets from a clustered region of massive star formation: Morphology and composition in the IRAS 18264-1152 region
A. R. Costa Silva, R. Fedriani, J. C. Tan, A. Caratti o Garatti, S., Ramsay, V. Rosero, G. Cosentino, P. Gorai, S. Leurini

TL;DR
This study uses near-infrared observations to analyze the morphology and composition of jets in a massive star-forming region, revealing multiple outflows and a dense cluster of young stars.
Contribution
It provides high-resolution NIR imaging and detailed analysis of H2 jets in IRAS 18264-1152, uncovering multiple outflows and the structure of a forming massive star cluster.
Findings
Identification of nine point sources, including jet-driving young stars.
Detection of multiple large-scale outflows indicating a protostellar cluster.
Derived stellar density of approximately 4000 stars per cubic parsec.
Abstract
Massive stars form deeply embedded in their parental clouds, making it challenging to directly observe these stars and their immediate environments. It is known that accretion and ejection processes are intrinsically related, thus observing massive protostellar outflows can provide crucial information about the processes governing massive star formation close to the central engine. We aim to probe the IRAS 18264-1152 (G19.88-0.53) high-mass star-forming complex in the near infrared (NIR) through its molecular hydrogen (H2) jets to analyse the morphology and composition of the line emitting regions and to compare with other outflow tracers. We observed the H2 NIR jets via K-band (1.9-2.5um) observations obtained with the integral field units VLT/SINFONI and VLT/KMOS. SINFONI provides the highest NIR angular resolution achieved so far for the central region (~0.2''). We compared the…
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