ArXiv TLDR

JOYS: Launching and destruction of dust in protostellar jets. The case of BHR71-IRS1 with JWST/MIRI

🐦 Tweet
2604.11904

Łukasz Tychoniec, Logan Francis, Maria Gabriela Navarro, Jakobus M. Vorster, Ewine F. van Dishoeck + 22 more

astro-ph.SRastro-ph.EPastro-ph.GA

TLDR

JWST observations of BHR71-IRS1 provide direct evidence that dust is launched in a Class 0 protostellar jet and partially survives shock processing.

Key contributions

  • First-time spatial resolution of the ionized central jet of BHR71-IRS1 with JWST/MIRI.
  • Identified unique refractory, volatile, and noble-gas lines, revealing wiggling knots of emission.
  • Detected warm (200-400 K) and cold (70-90 K) dust components co-spatial with jet bullets.
  • Shock modeling shows declining velocity and density, with Fe/Ni depletion indicating dust survival.

Why it matters

This study uses JWST to resolve a long-standing question about dust launching in protostellar jets, showing it can survive harsh conditions. Understanding this process is crucial for planet formation theories, as it links disk material to the broader stellar environment.

Original Abstract

Protostellar winds can theoretically lift solids from the planet-forming disks, but direct evidence for launched dust has been scarce so far. Numerous atomic lines that are unique to mid-infrared (IR) wavelengths reveal refractories eroded from dust grains and provide information on wind properties in the earliest stages of the star formation process. We present JWST/MIRI-MRS spectral imaging of the inner 2000 au of the BHR71-IRS1 blueshifted side of the outflow. Atomic line intensities are compared to shock models to constrain the physical conditions and elemental abundances of the outflowing gas. Dust continuum maps are constructed from PSF-subtracted cubes, and the dust spectral energy distribution is analyzed. The ionized central jet of BHR71-IRS1 is spatially resolved and imaged for the first time, revealing a unique inventory of refractory, volatile, and noble-gas fine-structure lines (Fe, Ni, Co, Cl, S, Ne, Ar). The emission is concentrated along four bright knots that wiggle along the jet axis. PSF-subtracted continuum maps reveal extended mid-IR continuum emission co-spatial with the jet bullets and within the H$_2$-traced outflow cone. Spectral energy distributions along the jet are fit together with the extinction, revealing a warm (200-400 K) and a cold (70-90 K) dust component. Shock modeling constrained by the mid-IR lines indicates a decline in shock velocity from 70 to 35 km s$^{-1}$ and pre-shock density from $>$10$^5$ to $ 4\times 10^4$ cm$^{-3}$ with distance from the protostar. Gas-phase Fe and Ni are measurably depleted relative to Solar abundances, consistent with a substantial fraction of refractories remaining locked in grains in spite of the shocks. These JWST observations provide direct evidence that dust is launched in a Class 0 jet and at least partly survives shock processing.

📬 Weekly AI Paper Digest

Get the top 10 AI/ML arXiv papers from the week — summarized, scored, and delivered to your inbox every Monday.