Investigating the Nested Structure of the Outflow from the Low Luminosity Protostar IRAS 16253-2429 using JWST and ALMA

Abstract

Understanding the earliest stage of star and planet formation requires detailed observations to address the connection and interplay between the accretion, outflow and disk evolution. We present results from the observations of the low luminosity (Lbol~0.2~L) and mass (M*\,0.15~M) Class~0 protostar IRAS 16253-2429, conducted as part of the eDisk ALMA large program and the JWST cycle-1 GO program IPA. Observations reveal a wide hourglass-shaped continuum cavity traced in scattered light (at ≤~5~μm), with a brighter, extended northern side. We detect 15 pure rotational H2 transitions (Eup:~1015--21411~K), revealing a wide-angle molecular outflow. The outflow width (as traced in H2~0-0~S(11)) at the protostellar location measures ≤35 au, slightly larger than the dust and Keplerian disk diameters (30 au) but wider than the 20--23~au jet width in [Fe II]. The opening angle narrows from 40--35 for the low-J H2 lines (up to S(5)) and the cold gas component (ALMA 12CO) to 28--19 for the high-J H2 lines (S(7)--S(11)). Position-velocity diagrams of H2 reveal higher velocities for higher Eup, ranging from ~12.5 km~s-1 for H2~0-0~S(1) and S(2) to ~28.5 km~s-1 for H2~0-0~S(5)~and~S(7) with respect to the mean flow velocity. The nested excitation and velocity structure of the collimated jet and wide angle wind suggest a magnetohydrodynamic wind as a likely launching mechanism, similar to the findings in other protostars and Class II sources. The lower velocity mm CO may be gas from the infalling envelope accelerated outwards by the wide angle wind along the cavity walls.

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