Visit ASIAA Homepage Registration Deadline: April 8, 2025 (Taiwan Time)
NA-TW joint ALMA workshop 2025
New ALMA windows on the universe - Band 1 and the future WSU

June 16(Mon)-19(Thu), 2025
ASIAA Auditorium, Taipei, Taiwan

Poster Presentation

Nested Morphological and Kinematic Structures of Outflows Revealed by ALMA Observations

Author(s): Chun-Fan Liu (ASIAA), Hsien Shang (ASIAA), Doug Johnstone (NRC Herzberg), Tsung-Han Ai (ASIAA/NCU), Tsz Ming Lee (ASIAA/CUHK), Ruben Krasnopolsky (ASIAA) and ALMASOP Team

Presenter: Chun-Fan Liu (ASIAA)

The Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array Survey of Orion Planck Galactic Cold Clumps (ALMASOP) reveals complex nested morphological and kinematic features of molecular outflows through the CO (J = 2−1) and SiO (J = 5−4) emission. We characterize the jet and outflow kinematics of the ALMASOP sample in four representative sources (HOPS 10, 315, 358, and G203.21-11.20W2) through channel maps and position–velocity diagrams (PVDs) parallel and transverse to the outflow axes. The combined CO and SiO emission exhibits the coexistence of the conventional extremely high-velocity jets and shell-like low-velocity cavity walls and new features. More complex, nested bubble-like and filamentary structures in the images and channel maps, triangle-shaped regions near the base of the parallel PVDs, and regions composed of rhombus/oval shapes in the transverse PVDs are also evident. Such features find natural explanations within the bubble structure of the unified model of jet, wind, and ambient medium. The reverse shock cavity is revealed on the PVD base regions, and other features naturally arise within the dynamic postshock region of magnetic interaction. The finer nested shells observed within the compressed wind region reveal previously unnoticed shocked emission between the jet and the conventional large cavity walls. These pseudopulse-produced filamentary features connect to the jetlike knotty blobs, creating an impression of episodicity in mass ejection. SiO emission is enhanced downstream of the reverse shock boundary, with jetlike excitation conditions. Combined, these observed features reveal the extended structures induced by the magnetic interplay between a jet-bearing magnetized wide-angle wind and its ambient magnetized surrounding medium.

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