Revealing a Centrally Condensed Structure in OMC-3/MMS 3 with ALMA High Resolution Observations
Abstract
Using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), we investigated a peculiar millimeter source MMS 3 located in the Orion Molecular Cloud 3 (OMC-3) region in the 1.3 mm continuum, CO (J=2-1), SiO (J=5-4), C18O (J=2-1), N2D+ (J=3-2), and DCN (J=3-2) emissions. With the ALMA high angular resolution (0''.2), we detected a very compact and highly centrally condensed continuum emission with a size of 0''.45 × 0''.32 (P.A.=0.22). The peak position coincides with the locations of previously reported Spitzer/IRAC and X-ray sources within their positional uncertainties. We also detected an envelope with a diameter of 6800 au (P.A.=75) in the C18O (J=2-1) emission. Moreover, a bipolar outflow was detected in the CO (J=2-1) emission for the first time. The outflow elongates roughly perpendicular to the long axis of the envelope detected in the C18O (J=2-1) emission. Compact high-velocity CO gas in the (red-shifted) velocity range of 22-30 km s-1, presumably tracing a jet, was detected near the 1.3 mm continuum peak. A compact and faint red-shifted SiO emission was marginally detected on the CO outflow lobe. The physical quantities of the outflow in MMS 3 are relatively smaller than those in other sources in the OMC-3 region. The centrally condensed object associated with the near-infrared and X-ray sources, the flattened envelope, and the faint outflow indicate that MMS 3 harbors a low mass protostar with an age of 103 yr.
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