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A&A 462, 163-172 (2007)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20065621
Warm SiO gas in molecular bullets associated with protostellar outflows
B. Nisini1, C. Codella2, T. Giannini1, J. Santiago Garcia3, J. S. Richer4, R. Bachiller3, and M. Tafalla31 INAF - Osservatorio Astronomico di Roma, via di Frascati 33, 00040 Monteporzio Catone, Italy
e-mail: nisini@oa-roma.inaf.it
2 INAF - Istituto di Radioastronomia, Sezione di Firenze, Largo E. Fermi 5, 50125 Firenze, Italy
3 Observatorio Astronómico Nacional (IGN), Alfonso XII 3, 28014 Madrid, Spain
4 Cavendish Laboratory, J J Thomson Avenue, Cambridge CB3 0HE, UK
(Received 17 May 2006 / Accepted 27 September 2006)
Abstract
Context.We present the first SiO multiline analysis (from J = 2-1 to J = 11-10)
of the molecular bullets along the outflows of the Class 0 sources L1448-mm and L1157-mm, obtained through observations with IRAM and JCMT.
Aims.We investigate the physical properties of
different types of bullets, in order to explore their excitation conditions and constrain
their formation and evolution.
Methods.We have computed the main physical parameters (
,
,
) in each bullet and compared them with other tracers of warm and dense gas and with models for the SiO excitation in shocks.
Results.The bullets close to L1448-mm, associated with high velocity gas, have higher
excitation conditions (
~ 106 cm-3,
K) than the L1157 bullets (
~ 1-5
105 cm-3,
K). In both the sources, there is clear evidence of the presence of velocity components
having different excitation conditions, with the denser and/or warmer gas associated with
the gas at the higher speed.
In L1448 the bulk of the emission is due to the high-excitation and high velocity gas, while in L1157 most of the emission comes from the low excitation gas at ambient velocity.
The observed velocity-averaged line ratios
are well reproduced by shocks with speeds
larger than ~30 km s-1 and densities ~105-106 cm-3. Plane-parallel shock
models, however, fail to predict all the observed line profiles and in particular the very similar profiles shown by both low and high excitation lines.
Conclusions.The observations support the idea that the L1157 clumps
are shock interaction events older than the L1448 bullets
close to the driving source. In the latter objects, the velocity structure
and the variations of physical parameters with the velocity
very closely resemble those found in optical/IR jets near the
protostar, suggesting that similar launching and excitation
mechanisms are also at the origin of collimated jets seen at
millimetre wavelengths.
Key words: ISM: jets and outflows -- ISM: molecules -- shock waves -- submillimeter -- ISM: individual objects: L1448-L1157 -- line: formation
© ESO 2007
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