Resolving Twin Jets and Twin Disks with JWST and ALMA: The Young WL 20 Multiple System
Mary Barsony, Michael E. Ressler (1), Valentin J.M. Le Gouellec (2),, {\L}ukasz Tychoniec (3), Martijn L. van Gelder (3) ((1) Jet Propulsion, Laboratory, (2) NASA Ames Research Center, (3) Leiden Observatory)

TL;DR
This study uses JWST and ALMA to discover and analyze twin jets and disks in the young WL 20 multiple system, revealing insights into outflow evolution and disk wind origins in pre-main-sequence stars.
Contribution
First detection of mid-infrared jets from pre-main-sequence objects using JWST, combined with ALMA imaging of twin disks, providing new understanding of outflow evolution.
Findings
Jets observed only in specific mid-infrared lines.
H2 emission shows a wide-angled, biconical morphology.
System age estimated at 2-2.5 million years with no molecular outflows detected.
Abstract
We report the discovery of jets emanating from pre-main-sequence objects exclusively at mid-infrared wavelengths, enabled by the superb sensitivity of JWST's Mid-InfraRed Medium-Resolution Spectrometer (MIRI MRS) instrument. These jets are observed only in lines of [NiII], [FeII], [ArII], and [NeII]. The H emission, imaged in eight distinct transitions, has a completely different morphology, exhibiting a wide-angled, biconical shape, symmetrically distributed about the jet axes. Synergistic high-resolution Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) observations resolve a pair of side-by-side edge-on accretion disks lying at the origin of the twin mid-infrared jets. Assuming coevality of the components of the young multiple system under investigation, the system age is at least (2 2.5) 10 yr, despite the discrepantly younger age inferred from the spectral…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Superconducting Materials and Applications
