A candidate 0.3-7.6 MJup companion is reported in the gap of the ~2.8 Myr pre-transitional disk around WRAY 15-1880, with an ALMA blob interpreted as a vortex at the m=1 Lindblad resonance.
Recipes for stellar jets: results of combined optical/infrared diagnostics
1 Pith paper cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
We examine the conditions of the plasma along a sample of 'classical' Herbig-Haro jets located in the Orion and Vela star forming regions, through combined optical-infrared spectral diagnostics. Our sample includes HH 111, HH 34, HH 83, HH 73, HH 24 C/E, HH 24 J, observed at moderate spatial/spectral resolution. The obtained spectra cover a wide wavelength range from 0.6-2.5 um, including many transitions from regions of different excitation conditions. This allows us to probe the density and temperature stratification which characterises the cooling zones behind the shock fronts along the jet. The derived physical parameters (such as the extinction, the electron density and temperature, the ionisation fraction, and the total density) are used to estimate the depletion onto dust grains of Calcium and Iron with respect to solar abundances. This turns out to be between 70% and 0% for Ca and ~90% for Fe, suggesting that the weak shocks present in the beams are not capable of completely destroying the dust grains. We then derive the mass flux rates (Mdot_jet is on average 5 10^-8 M_solar yr^-1) and the associated linear momentum fluxes. The latter are higher than, or of the same order as, those measured in the coaxial molecular flows, suggesting that the flows are jet driven. Finally, we discuss differences between jets in our sample.
fields
astro-ph.SR 1years
2026 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
citing papers explorer
-
Analysis of the young disk around WRAY 15-1880: does it contain a primitive planetary system?
A candidate 0.3-7.6 MJup companion is reported in the gap of the ~2.8 Myr pre-transitional disk around WRAY 15-1880, with an ALMA blob interpreted as a vortex at the m=1 Lindblad resonance.