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arxiv: 2606.11908 · v1 · pith:6MFF33A7new · submitted 2026-06-10 · 🌌 astro-ph.SR · astro-ph.GA

Protostellar Outflows at the EarliesT Stages (POETS). IX. Magnetohydrodynamic disk winds traced by SO and SO₂ in luminous protostars

classification 🌌 astro-ph.SR astro-ph.GA
keywords diskaxisg035iras21078protostellarvelocitymolecularmolecules
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We investigate two massive young stellar objects (YSOs), IRAS21078+5211 and G035.02+0.35, where evidence for magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) disk winds (DWs) has been obtained at scales of 10-100 au through measurements of the 22GHz water maser velocity distribution within the Protostellar Outflows at the EarliesT Stages (POETS) survey. We employ IRAM Northern Extended Millimeter Array and archival Atacama Large Millimeter Array observations of IRAS21078+5211 and G035.02+0.35, respectively, to study kinematics and physical conditions of the corresponding protostellar winds on scales of 100-1000 au using the same molecular tracers. In IRAS21078+5211, the emissions of several molecules, particularly SO, SO2, CH3CN and CH3OH, are distributed along the axis of the radio jet, and present a LSR velocity (Vlsr) gradient transversal to the jet axis. Position-velocity (PV) plots of the SO lines show patterns consistent with Keplerian rotation. The SO2 emission comes from high velocity gas flowing close to the jet axis, while CH3CN and CH3OH present larger radial extension than the S-bearing species. In G035.02+0.35, the same molecules are instead distributed along the major axis of the rotating disk, and their Vlsr gradients consistently trace the disk rotation. The corresponding PV plots present Keplerian profiles. SO is the only molecular species whose emission extends well outside the disk. In both YSOs, the spatial and velocity distributions of SO are consistent with a rotating wind magneto-centrifugally launched from the YSO disk. The comparison with models of molecule formation and excitation in shocks indicates that the different radial extension of the molecular species observed in the protostellar wind of IRAS21078+5211, as well as the lack of molecules, except SO, in the G035.02+0.35's wind, can be explained in terms of a radially extended MHD DW, rather than a compact X-wind.

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