Breaking Orion's Veil bubble with fossil outflows
U Kavak, J. R. Goicoechea, C. H. M. Pabst, J. Bally, F. F. S. van der, Tak, A. G. G. M. Tielens

TL;DR
This study investigates how fossil outflows from massive protostars influence the morphology of the Orion Veil bubble, revealing that mechanical feedback from outflows can cause structural breakages in star-forming regions.
Contribution
It provides evidence that protostellar outflows, rather than radiative feedback, shape the Orion Veil's protrusions and influence the evolution of the surrounding HII region.
Findings
Fossil outflows from protostars create protrusions in the Orion Veil.
Mechanical feedback from outflows impacts the morphology of star-forming regions.
Protostellar outflows can cause breakages in ionization fronts.
Abstract
The role of feedback in the self-regulation of star formation is a fundamental question in astrophysics. The Orion Nebula is the nearest site of ongoing and recent massive star formation. It is a unique laboratory for the study of stellar feedback. Recent SOFIA [CII] 158 m observations revealed an expanding bubble, the Veil shell, being powered by stellar winds and ionization feedback. We have identified a protrusion-like substructure in the Northwest portion of the Orion Veil Shell that may indicate additional feedback mechanisms that are highly directional. Our goal is to investigate the origin of the protrusion by quantifying its possible driving mechanisms. We use the [CII] 158 m map of the Orion Nebula obtained with the upGREAT instrument onboard SOFIA. The spectral and spatial resolution of the observations are 0.3 km/s and 16 arcsec, respectively. We consider three…
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