GeminiFocus October 2015 | Page 15

“The Gemini data are the best ever obtained from the ground of this remarkable jet complex and are showing us striking new detail”, says Aspin. Reipurth and Aspin add that they are particularly interested in the fine structure and “excitation distribution” of these jets. “One jet is highly disturbed, suggesting that the source may be a close binary whose orbit perturbs the jet body”, says Reipurth. The researchers report that the jet complex emanates from SSV63 — a Class I protostar system, which high-resolution infrared imaging reveals to have at least five components. More sources are found in this region, but only at longer, submillimeter wavelengths of light, suggesting that there are even younger, and more deeply embedded sources in the region. All of these embedded sources are located within the dense molecular cloud core. A search for dim optical and infrared young stars has revealed several faint optical stars located well outside the star-forming core. In particular, GMOS found a halo of five faint hydrogen-alpha (H-alpha) emission stars (which emit large amounts of red light) surrounding the HH 24 Complex well outside the dense cloud core. Gemini spectroscopy October 2015 of the H-alpha emission stars show that they are early or mid-M dwarfs (stars with very low mass), at least one of which being a borderline brown dwarf. The presence of these five stars well outside the star-forming cloud core is puzzling, because the gas there is far too tenuous for star formation. Instead they are likely orphan protostars ejected shortly after birth from the nearby star-forming core. Such ejections occur when many stars form closely together within the same cloud core. The crowded stars start moving around each other in a chaotic dance. This ultimately leads to the ejection of the smallest ones. A consequence of such ejections is that pairs of the remaining protostars bind together gravitationally. The dense gas that surrounds the newly formed pairs brakes their motion, so they gradually spiral together to form tight binary systems with highly eccentric orbits. Each time the two components are closest in their orbits they disturb each other, leading to accretion of gas, and an outflow event that we see as supersonic jets. The many knots in the jets thus represent a series of such perturbations. GeminiFocus 13