The image shows the jet HH 1165 (in green) launched by the brown dwarf
Mayrit 1701117. The image is composed of observations of Hα (from
ionised hydrogen), of [SII] (ionised sulfur) and in the R-band (red
optical wavelengths) obtained with the SOAR telescope of the Cerro
Tololo Inter-American Observatory. The jet extends over a distance of
0.7 light years (equivalent to 0.2 parsecs) northwest of the brown
dwarf.
Astronomers led by the Max Planck Institute for
Extraterrestrial Physics and using the Cerro Tololo Inter-American
Observatory report the discovery of a spectacular extended jet from a
young brown dwarf. With masses too low to sustain hydrogen fusion in
their interiors, brown dwarfs occupy the mass range between stars and
giant planets. While young stars are commonly found to launch jets that
extend over a light year or more, this is the first jet with a similar
extent detected from a brown dwarf. The result lends new insight into
how sub-stellar objects form.
Intrinsically faint, brown dwarfs have been more elusive and
difficult to study than stars. While not quite massive enough to sustain
nuclear fusion at their core – the main energy source for brightly
shining stars, they are substantially more massive than giant planets,
with about ten times the mass of Jupiter or more. Brown dwarfs are
actually quite numerous; there are many more brown dwarfs in our Galaxy
than stars like the Sun. Nevertheless, observational information about
brown dwarfs in scarce and there is an ongoing debate between
astronomers if they form rather like planets or rather like stars do.
“We were looking for very young brown dwarfs, and picked this
particular object because it showed a wealth of prominent emission lines
associated with strong outflow activity from previous ESO VLT spectral
observations, which indicated that there is a shock front close to the
source,” explains Basmah Riaz, from the Max Planck Institute for
Extraterrestrial Physics, who led the study. The image obtained over a
total of three nights with the SOAR telescope of the Cerro Tololo
Inter-American Observatory shows the newly detected jet, HH 1165,
launched by the brown dwarf Mayrit 1701117, which is located in the
outer periphery of the 3 million year old sigma Ori cluster. As
described by co-author Cesar Briceno from the Cerro Tololo
Inter-American Observatory: “We could see surprisingly extended jet
emission after the first 30 minutes of integration. It was a real ‘Wow’
moment!”
The jet extends over a distanced of 0.7 light years (equivalent to
0.2 parsecs) northwest of the brown dwarf. The emission knots along the
jet reveal that the mass loss is time variable, probably a result of
episodic accretion onto the brown dwarf. While outflows have been
detected previously from young brown dwarfs, the earlier detections were
of "microjets" 10-100 times smaller in extent. “This discovery shows
that, like young stars, brown dwarfs can launch powerful parsec-scale
jets, and that they build up their mass through an unsteady, episodic
process,” explains Basmah Riaz.
“The HH 1165 jet shows all the familiar hallmarks of outflows from
stars: emission knots, a cavity with reflection nebulosity, and bow
shocks at the ends of the flow. It checks all the boxes quite
convincingly,” commented co-author Emma Whelan from the National
University of Ireland.
Brown dwarfs are known to be surrounded by disks at birth and to
build up their masses by accretion from molecular cloud cores. While it
may seem counterintuitive that mass loss (in a jet) is an integral part
of how an object grows or gains mass, this situation may arise because
of excess angular momentum. When spinning skaters pull in their arms,
they spin faster as a result of conservation of angular momentum.
Similarly, when large, slowly rotating molecular cloud cores collapse,
they may spin up too fast to squeeze down to the much smaller sizes of
stars or sub-stellar objects like brown dwarfs.
Riaz speculates that indeed “Molecular cloud cores have much more
angular momentum than can be contained by stars or brown dwarfs. So the
system needs to lose angular momentum for the object to grow in mass. By
removing angular momentum from the system, jets help solve the `angular
momentum problem’ faced by stars as well as brown dwarfs.”
To test this hypothesis, the team is on the hunt for more extended
jets from brown dwarfs, to understand how commonly they occur. Such jets
may be rare due to a lack of the environmental conditions needed to
allow the jet to propagate to, and still be visible at, large distances
from the source. We would expect that low-luminosity sources are more
likely to be found in low-density environments, after disruption and
fragmentation of very-low-mass cloud cores. So the problem is more
likely to be a lack of dense material to shock against than the
difficulty of propagation, which should be easier in a lower density
medium.
Contact
Riaz, Basmah
Marie Sklodowska-Curie EU Research Fellow
Phone: +49 (0)89 30000-3007
Fax: +49 (0)89 30000-3950
Email: hanneh@mpe.mpg.de
Hämmerle, Hannelore
press officer
Phone: +49 (0)89 30000-3980
Fax: +49 (0)89 30000-3569
Email: hanneh@mpe.mpg.de
Riaz, Basmah
Marie Sklodowska-Curie EU Research Fellow
Phone: +49 (0)89 30000-3007
Fax: +49 (0)89 30000-3950
Email: hanneh@mpe.mpg.de
Hämmerle, Hannelore
press officer
Phone: +49 (0)89 30000-3980
Fax: +49 (0)89 30000-3569
Email: hanneh@mpe.mpg.de
Original Publication
Basmah Riaz et al.
First Large Scale Herbig-Haro Jet Driven by a Proto-Brown Dwarf
Astrophysical Journal, in press
Source
First Large Scale Herbig-Haro Jet Driven by a Proto-Brown Dwarf
Astrophysical Journal, in press
Source
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