Bibcode
López, R.; Estalella, R.; Gomez-Velarde, G.; Riera, A.; Carrasco-González, C.
Referencia bibliográfica
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 498, Issue 3, 2009, pp.761-769
Fecha de publicación:
5
2009
Revista
Número de citas
4
Número de citas referidas
4
Descripción
Context: HH 223 is a knotty, undulating nebular emission of ˜30
arcsec length found in the L723 star-forming region. It lies projected
onto the largest blueshifted lobe of the quadrupolar CO outflow powered
by a low-mass YSO system embedded in the core of L723. Aims: We
analysed the physical conditions and kinematics along HH 223 with the
aim of disentangling whether the emission arises from shock-excited,
supersonic gas characteristic of a stellar jet, or is only tracing the
wall cavity excavated by the CO outflow. Methods: We performed
long-slit optical spectroscopy along HH 223, crossing all the bright
knots (A to E) and part of the low-brightness emission nebula (F
filament). One spectrum of each knot, suitable to characterize the
nature of its emission, was obtained. The physical conditions and the
radial velocity of the HH 223 emission along the slits were also sampled
at smaller scale (0.6 arcsec) than the knot sizes. Results: The
spectra of all the HH 223 knots appear like those of intermediate/high
excitation Herbig-Haro objects. The emission is supersonic, with
blueshifted peak velocities ranging from -60 to -130 km s-1.
Reliable variations in the kinematics and physical conditions at smaller
scales that the knot sizes are also found. Conclusions: The
properties of the HH 223 emission derived from the spectroscopy confirm
the HH nature of the object; the supersonic optical outflow most
probably is also being powered by the YSOs embedded in the L723 core.
Based on observations made with the 2.6 m Nordic Optical Telescope
operated at the Observatorio del Roque de los Muchachos of the Instituto
de Astrofísica de Canarias.
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