Incredible Image Shows Twin Stellar Jets Blasting Out of a Star-Forming Region

Young stars go through a lot as they’re being born. They sometimes emit jets of ionized gas called MHOs—Molecular Hydrogen emission-line Objects. New images of two of these MHOs, also called stellar jets, show how complex they can be and what a hard time astronomers have as they try to understand them.

Stellar jets from young stars aren’t that rare. Young stars create them when they propel bursts of material out of their opposite sides. They only form when young stars are still growing and accreting material. Astronomers think interactions between the star’s magnetic fields and the material surrounding the star’s disks create the jets. Sometimes the jets are made up of knots of material, and sometimes they’re continuous and curved.

A new paper looks at two of these MHOs and their environments. The authors used archived data and new observations to develop a model that explains them. They made headway but no firm conclusions. But their work does show how complex MHOs can be. And how pleasing they can be to the eye.

The paper is “High-resolution images of two wiggling stellar jets, MHO 1502 and MHO 2147, obtained with GSAOI+GeMS.” The journal Astronomy and Astrophysics will publish the paper, and it’s currently available at the pre-press site arxiv.org. The lead author is L.V. Ferrero from the Universidad Nacional de Córdoba in Argentina.

The two systems of jets in this study show different morphologies. One of them is a pair of curved, serpentine jets. The other is a pair of jets made of knotted clumps of gas chained together—each of the pairs formed in a different type of stellar environment.

The curved jets are named MHO 2147, and they’re about 10,000 light-years away in the Ophiuchus region. Astronomers think the stellar source responsible for the jets is IRAS 17527, discovered in 2011. Some interaction between the source and its environment creates the curved shape of the jets, but the stellar source isn’t visible. The jets are curved because they point in different directions over time, and their sinewy form suggests continuous emission without interruption. In their paper, the astronomers point out that the jets’ change in direction is due to gravitational influences from nearby stars.

The sinuous young stellar jet, MHO 2147, meanders lazily across a field of stars in this image captured from Chile by the international Gemini Observatory, a Program of NSF's NOIRLab. The stellar jet is the outflow from a young star that is embedded in an infrared dark cloud. Astronomers suspect its sidewinding appearance is caused by the gravitational attraction of companion stars. These crystal-clear observations were made using the Gemini South telescope’s adaptive optics system, which helps astronomers counteract the blurring effects of atmospheric turbulence. Image Credit: International Gemini Observatory/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA
The sinuous young stellar jet, MHO 2147, meanders lazily across a field of stars in this image captured from Chile by the international Gemini Observatory, a Program of NSF’s NOIRLab. The stellar jet is the outflow from a young star embedded in an infrared dark cloud. Astronomers suspect the gravitational attraction of companion stars causes its sidewinding appearance. The Gemini South telescope’s adaptive optics system captured these crystal-clear observations. Adaptive optics help astronomers counteract the blurring effects of atmospheric turbulence. Image Credit: International Gemini Observatory/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA

Astronomers discovered IRAS 17537 in 2011 and identified it as a young stellar object (YSO) with about 12 solar masses. There was evidence at the time for a second companion star. This new study further examined IRAS 17527, and the authors think a triple star system could be responsible for the jet’s curved morphology.

MHO 2147 contains some interesting features. This 4-image panel shows them. The upper right panel shows the center of the jet where the pale pink areas are nebulae that likely contain massive young stars. The stars are surrounded by accretion disks, which are ejecting material and creating a cavity. Scattered light from the central source is reflecting off the cavity walls in pink. In the other panels, the blue areas are diffuse clouds of molecular hydrogen excited by the collision between the surrounding material and material ejected by individual stars. Gemini Observatory captured these images as part of a Program of NSF's NOIRLab. Image Credit: International Gemini Observatory/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA
MHO 2147 contains some interesting features. This 4-image panel shows some of them. The upper right panel shows the jet’s center, where the pale pink areas are nebulae that likely contain massive young stars. Accretion disks surround the stars, and the stars are ejecting material and creating a cavity. Scattered light from the central source reflects off the cavity walls in pink. In the other panels, the blue areas are diffuse clouds of molecular hydrogen excited by the collision between the surrounding material and material ejected by individual stars. Gemini Observatory captured these images as part of a Program of NSF’s NOIRLab. Image Credit: International Gemini Observatory/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA

MHO 2147 is in an infrared dark cloud (IDC). An IDC is a cold, dense region inside a molecular cloud, and the IDC is opaque at the infrared wavelengths the astronomers observed in this study. Astronomers don’t know much about IDCs yet, and they only discovered them in 1996. But evidence shows they could represent the earliest stages of star formation, especially massive stars.

A fainter jet named MHO 2148 is in the same region as MHO 2147, oriented perpendicularly. MHO 2148 doesn’t share the same source as MHO 2147 but might come from a companion star.

This is a composite image of MHO 2147 obtained with GSAOI/GEMINI.MHO 2147 is more continuous than the knotted MHO 1502, but it still has some knotted morphology. The white arrows mark the position of the different knots associated with MHO 2147. There's another adjacent jet in the region designated Ad-jet which isn't part of the same structure. Ad-jet's knots are shown with green arrows. Image Credit:  Ferrero et al. 2021
This image shows how complex groups of stellar jets can be. It’s a composite image of MHO 2147 obtained with GSAOI/GEMINI. MHO 2147 is more continuous than the other MHO in this study, the knotted MHO 1502, but it still has some knots. The white arrows mark the position of the different knots associated with MHO 2147. MHO 2148 is from a separate source than MHO 2147 and might come from a companion star. Another adjacent jet in the region designated Ad-jet isn’t part of the same structure. Green arrows point out the Ad-jet’s knots. Image Credit: Ferrero et al. 2021
This image from the study is centred on the driving star that's the source of MHO 2147. The blue and green crosses mark the location of ‘source A’ and a bright source at 24 µm, respectively. There's a lot of uncertainty around MHO 2147's source, but it may be a triple-star system. Image Credit:  Ferrero et al. 2021
This image from the study centers on the driving star that’s MHO 2147’s source. The blue and green crosses mark the location of ‘source A’ and a bright source at 24 µm, respectively. There’s a lot of uncertainty around MHO 2147’s source, but it may be a triple-star system. Image Credit: Ferrero et al. 2021

The other jets, named MHO 1502, are in a different environment. They’re knotted rather than curved, and the researchers think the jets are intermittent rather than continuous. MHO 1502 is in an active star-forming HII region made of ionized atomic hydrogen. The researchers think a pair of binary stars might create the jets.

This image of the knotted young stellar jet MHO 1502 was also captured by the international Gemini Observatory, a Program of NSF's NOIRLab. The stellar jet is embedded in an area of star formation known as an HII region. A chain of knots makes up this bipolar jet, suggesting that the binary star responsible for it emits material intermittently. The Gemini South telescope captured these crystal clear images using its adaptive optics system, which helps astronomers counteract the blurring effects of atmospheric turbulence. Image Credit: International Gemini Observatory/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA
The international Gemini Observatory captured this image of the knotted young stellar jet MHO 1502. The stellar jet is embedded in an area of star formation known as an HII region. A chain of knots makes up this bipolar jet, suggesting that the binary star responsible for it emits material intermittently. The Gemini South telescope captured these crystal clear images using its adaptive optics system, which helps astronomers counteract the blurring effects of atmospheric turbulence. Image Credit: International Gemini Observatory/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA

MHO 1502 is about 700 parsecs away in the molecular cloud Vela-D. Astronomers discovered it in 2007, and they identified the knots in 2013. Previous research showed that MHO 1502’s driving source could be a single intermediate-mass star but couldn’t rule out an unresolved binary or even a multi-star system. This study hints at the presence of a binary star separated by about 240 AU but doesn’t reach any specific conclusions.

This is a composite image of MHO 1502 obtained with GSAOI/GEMINI. The K-band filter is shown in magenta and the H2-band filter is in green. The yellow arrows indicate H2 emissions adjacent to the MHO 1502 jet. They lie in the visual field and are unlikely to be associated with this jet. Image Credit: Ferrero et al. 2021
This is a composite image of MHO 1502 obtained with GSAOI/GEMINI. The yellow arrows indicate H2 emissions adjacent to the MHO 1502 jet. They lie in the visual field and are unlikely to be associated with this jet. Image Credit: Ferrero et al. 2021
This image from the study shows IRAC 18064, which is MHO 1502’s source. The source could be a single intermediate-mass star, a pair of stars about 240 AU apart, or even a multi-star system. Image Credit: Ferrero et al. 2021

The systems of jets and the sources that drive them are complex and interrelated, but some of the details are still unknown. Are binary or multiple stars at play in these systems? The authors think that’s likely; otherwise, the jets wouldn’t show clumping or curving.

Jets like these aren’t uncommon, and understanding them might help astronomers understand the star-formation process and solar system evolution in more detail. Only young stars have jets because they only form when a star is actively growing. So learning more about MHOs would tell us more about young stars themselves and the star-formation process.

Astronomers only discovered these jets a few years ago, which is also true of Infrared Dark Clouds. The jets, the clouds, and the star-forming regions they reside in are probably connected in various ways, but the study of these objects is still in its infancy. Astronomers have a lot of work to do, and there’ll no doubt be some exciting discoveries along the way.

The last word goes to the authors: “The similarity of MHO 2147, the Ad–jet, and the perpendicular MHO 2148 jet to other previously reported jets suggests the existence of a small but interesting group of adjacent and perpendicular jets that are interrelated and are likely to be associated. However, to shed light on the physical relation of MHO 2147, Ad–jet, and MHO 2148, high-angular-resolution and sensitive multi-wavelength data are needed.”

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