Discovery of a collimated jet from the low luminosity protostar IRAS 16253$-$2429 in a quiescent accretion phase with the JWST
Mayank Narang, Manoj P., Himanshu Tyagi, Dan M. Watson, S. Thomas, Megeath, Samuel Federman, Adam E. Rubinstein, Robert Gutermuth, Alessio, Caratti o Garatti, Henrik Beuther, Tyler L. Bourke, Ewine F. Van Dishoeck,, Neal J. Evans II, Guillem Anglada, Mayra Osorio, Thomas Stanke

TL;DR
This study reports the discovery of a highly collimated atomic jet from a very low-luminosity protostar using JWST, revealing that such protostars can drive jets even during quiescent accretion phases.
Contribution
First detection of a collimated atomic jet from the lowest luminosity protostar in the JWST IPA program, demonstrating jet activity during quiescent accretion.
Findings
Atomic jet velocity ~169 km/s
Jet width increases from 23 to 60 au
Mass loss rate ~0.4-1.1×10^{-10} M_sun/yr
Abstract
Investigating Protostellar Accretion (IPA) is a JWST Cycle~1 GO program that uses NIRSpec IFU and MIRI MRS to obtain 2.9--28~m spectral cubes of young, deeply embedded protostars with luminosities of 0.2 to 10,000~L and central masses of 0.15 to 12~M. In this Letter, we report the discovery of a highly collimated atomic jet from the Class~0 protostar IRAS~162532429, the lowest luminosity source ( = 0.2 ) in the IPA program. The collimated jet is detected in multiple [Fe~II] lines, [Ne~II], [Ni~II], and H~I lines, but not in molecular emission. The atomic jet has a velocity of about 169~~15~km\,s, after correcting for inclination. The width of the jet increases with distance from the central protostar from 23 to~60 au, corresponding to an opening angle of 2.6~~0.5\arcdeg. By comparing the measured flux ratios of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Spectroscopy and Laser Applications · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
