Velocity-resolved [O I] 63,145 um, [C II] 158 um, and OH line mapping along the Orion BN/KL explosive outflow and irradiated shocks
J. R. Goicoechea, R. G"usten, B. Godard, H. Wiesemeyer, R. Higgins, A. Gusdorf, M. G. Santa-Maria, M. Zannese, K. M. Menten
arXiv:2605.18438v1 Announce Type: new
Abstract: Stellar mergers produce explosive outflows that serve as transient sources of IR line luminosity and inject mechanical energy early into the natal molecular cloud. We present the first velocity-resolved maps of the [O I] 63 and 145 um fine-structure line emission from the wide-angle outflow in Orion BN/KL, the nearest explosive outflow. The data were obtained with SOFIA and include sensitive [C II] 158 um and OH maps. They allowed us to disentangle the quiescent cloud gas from the outflow, traced by a broader [O I] component with a line FWHM of about 20-30 km/s and exhibiting a spatial distribution similar to that of the shock-excited H2 emission seen with JWST. The OH 119 um line shows a prominent P-Cygni profile covering 160 km/s, similar to the very broad CO lines. The total [O I] 63 and 145 line luminosity is remarkably high, 86.5 L_sun, comparable to the H2 and CO line luminosities, implying an outflow mass-loss rate of (9.1+/-2.6)x10^-3 M_sun/yr and a mass of 3.3-5.9 M_sun. The [O I] 63 / 145 and [O I] 63 / [C II] 158 intensity ratios reach very high values in the line wings (20-30 and 40-60, respectively), exceeding those found in PDRs. These ratios are consistent with the presence of dense (10^5 to 10^6 cm^-3 ) and warm (~500 K) postshock gas. We analyzed the fine-structure line-wing intensities using magnetized shock models that include UV irradiation, to which the [C II] 158 line intensity is particularly sensitive. We find that the [O I] and [C II] intensities are consistent with emission from dissociative J-type shocks with velocities of 30-40 km/s and preshock gas densities of a few 10^4 cm^-3, illuminated by external UV radiation generated by surrounding fast shocks and possibly by massive (proto)stars in the region. We also report a broad [O I] emission feature around the BN star, which we attribute to an unresolved outflow or wind bow shock.arXiv:2605.18438v1 Announce Type: new
Abstract: Stellar mergers produce explosive outflows that serve as transient sources of IR line luminosity and inject mechanical energy early into the natal molecular cloud. We present the first velocity-resolved maps of the [O I] 63 and 145 um fine-structure line emission from the wide-angle outflow in Orion BN/KL, the nearest explosive outflow. The data were obtained with SOFIA and include sensitive [C II] 158 um and OH maps. They allowed us to disentangle the quiescent cloud gas from the outflow, traced by a broader [O I] component with a line FWHM of about 20-30 km/s and exhibiting a spatial distribution similar to that of the shock-excited H2 emission seen with JWST. The OH 119 um line shows a prominent P-Cygni profile covering 160 km/s, similar to the very broad CO lines. The total [O I] 63 and 145 line luminosity is remarkably high, 86.5 L_sun, comparable to the H2 and CO line luminosities, implying an outflow mass-loss rate of (9.1+/-2.6)x10^-3 M_sun/yr and a mass of 3.3-5.9 M_sun. The [O I] 63 / 145 and [O I] 63 / [C II] 158 intensity ratios reach very high values in the line wings (20-30 and 40-60, respectively), exceeding those found in PDRs. These ratios are consistent with the presence of dense (10^5 to 10^6 cm^-3 ) and warm (~500 K) postshock gas. We analyzed the fine-structure line-wing intensities using magnetized shock models that include UV irradiation, to which the [C II] 158 line intensity is particularly sensitive. We find that the [O I] and [C II] intensities are consistent with emission from dissociative J-type shocks with velocities of 30-40 km/s and preshock gas densities of a few 10^4 cm^-3, illuminated by external UV radiation generated by surrounding fast shocks and possibly by massive (proto)stars in the region. We also report a broad [O I] emission feature around the BN star, which we attribute to an unresolved outflow or wind bow shock.

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