SIMBAD references

2006A&A...450L..17F - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 450, L17-20 (2006/4-4)

The discovery of an expanding X-ray source in the HH 154 protostellar jet.

FAVATA F., BONITO R., MICELA G., FRIDLUND M., ORLANDO S., SCIORTINO S. and PERES G.

Abstract (from CDS):

Protostellar jets are a new class of X-ray sources which has been discovered with both XMM-Newton and Chandra. The mechanism responsible for the X-ray emission is still not clear. Self-shocking in jets, shocks where the jet hits the surrounding medium, reflected or scattered stellar X-ray emission have all been invoked as possible explanations. One key diagnostic discriminating among physical emission mechanisms is the motion of the X-ray source: hydrodynamical numerical models of continuous protostellar jets plowing through a uniform medium show an X-ray emitting shock front moving at several hundreds km/s. In the nearest X-ray emitting protostellar jet, HH154, this is detectable, with the spatial resolution of the Chandra X-ray observatory, over a few years baseline, allowing a robust discrimination among different mechanisms. We have performed, in October 2005, a deep Chandra X-ray observation of HH154. Comparison with the previous (2001) Chandra observation allows to detect proper motion down to the level predicted by models of X-ray emitting shocks in the jet. The 2005 Chandra observation of HH154 shows unexpected morphological changes of the X-ray emission in comparison with the 2001 data. Two components are present: a stronger, point-like component with no detectable motion and a weaker component which has expanded in size by approximately 300AU over the 4-years time base of the two observations. This expansion corresponds to approximately 500km/s, very close to the velocity of the X-ray emitting shock in the simple theoretical models. The 2005 data show a more complex system than initially thought (and modeled), with multiple components with different properties. The observed morphology is possibly indicating a pulsed jet propagating through a non-homogeneous medium, likely with medium density decreasing with distance from the driving source. Detailed theoretical modeling and deeper X-ray observations will be needed to understand the physics of this fascinating class of sources.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): ISM: Herbig-Haro objects - stars: pre-main sequence - X-rays: stars

Simbad objects: 3

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