JWST Observations of Young protoStars (JOYS). HH 211: the textbook case of a protostellar jet and outflow
A. Caratti o Garatti, T.P. Ray, P.J. Kavanagh, M.J. McCaughrean, C., Gieser, T. Giannini, E.F. van Dishoeck, K. Justtanont, M.L. van Gelder, L., Francis, H. Beuther, {\L}. Tychoniec, B. Nisini, M.G. Navarro, R. Devaraj, S., Reyes, P. Nazar, P. Klaassen, M. G\"udel, Th. Henning

TL;DR
This study uses JWST/MIRI to analyze the HH 211 protostellar jet, revealing a complex, layered structure with molecular and atomic components, and highlighting the dominant role of warm H2 in driving the outflow.
Contribution
First detailed JWST mid-IR observations of HH 211, showing the layered jet structure and emphasizing the importance of warm H2 in protostellar outflows.
Findings
Warm H2 is the main driver of the outflow.
Jet exhibits an onion-like layered structure.
Atomic and molecular components show different physical conditions.
Abstract
We use the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) and its Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI) (5-28 um), to study the embedded HH 211 flow. We map a 0.95'x0.22' region, covering the full extent of the blue-shifted lobe, the central protostellar region, and a small portion of the red-shifted lobe. The jet driving source is not detected even at the longest mid-IR wavelengths. The overall morphology of the flow consists of a highly collimated jet, mostly molecular (H2, HD) with an inner atomic ([FeI], [FeII], [SI], [NiII]) structure. The jet shocks the ambient medium, producing several large bow-shocks, rich in forbidden atomic and molecular lines, and is driving an H2 molecular outflow, mostly traced by low-J, v=0 transitions. Moreover, 0-0 S(1) uncollimated emission is also detected down to 2"-3" (~650-1000 au) from the source, tracing a cold (T=200-400 K), less dense and poorly collimated…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation · Astro and Planetary Science
