6533b7d4fe1ef96bd1263293
RESEARCH PRODUCT
X-ray emission from stellar jets by collision against high-density molecular clouds: an application to HH 248
Mariana OrellanaMarco MiceliAna I. Gómez De CastroElisa De CastroSalvatore OrlandoJavier Lopez-santiagoRosaria BonitoJ. F. Albacete-colomboSabina Ustamujicsubject
AstrofísicaHERBIGHARO OBJECTSJETS AND OUTFLOWS [ISM]Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical PhenomenaRotational symmetryFOS: Physical sciencesCloud computingAstrophysicsAstrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic AstrophysicsISM [X-RAYS]Space (mathematics)LuminosityHYDRODYNAMICS//purl.org/becyt/ford/1 [https]INDIVIDUAL OBJECTS (HH 248) [ISM]hydrodynamics Herbig-Haro objects ISM: individual objects: HH 248 ISM: jets and outflows X-rays: ISMAstrophysics::Galaxy AstrophysicsSolar and Stellar Astrophysics (astro-ph.SR)PhysicsJet (fluid)business.industryMolecular cloudAstronomy and Astrophysics//purl.org/becyt/ford/1.3 [https]PlasmaAstronomíaT Tauri starAstrophysics - Solar and Stellar AstrophysicsSpace and Planetary ScienceHerbig–Haro objectsbusinessdescription
We investigate the plausibility of detecting X-ray emission from a stellar jet that impacts against a dense molecular cloud. This scenario may be usual for classical T Tauri stars with jets in dense star-forming complexes. We first model the impact of a jet against a dense cloud by 2D axisymmetric hydrodynamic simulations, exploring different configurations of the ambient environment. Then, we compare our results with XMM-Newton observations of the Herbig-Haro object HH 248, where extended X-ray emission aligned with the optical knots is detected at the edge of the nearby IC 434 cloud. Our simulations show that a jet can produce plasma with temperatures up to 10 MK, consistent with production of X-ray emission, after impacting a dense cloud. We find that jets denser than the ambient medium but less dense than the cloud produce detectable X-ray emission only at the impact onto the cloud. From the exploration of the model parameter space, we constrain the physical conditions (jet density and velocity, cloud density) that reproduce well the intrinsic luminosity and emission measure of the X-ray source possibly associated with HH 248. Thus, we suggest that the extended X-ray source close to HH 248 corresponds to the jet impacting on a dense cloud.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2015-01-01 |