HST Observations of the HH 47 and HH 111 Stellar Jets
Hartigan, P. (Rice)
The superb spatial resolution made possible by the WFPC2 imager on the Hubble Space
Telescope has opened a new era in the study of shocks in stellar jets. This paper
summarizes the results of imaging surveys of two of the brightest and best resolved stellar
jets, HH 111 and HH 47. The new HST images show that the
jets appear quite different in the H-alpha and [S II]
lines; H-alpha concentrates in distinctive filaments while [S II] tends to be clumpier
and more widespread. Filamentary H-alpha emission should trace the location of the shock
fronts if the preshock gas is neutral, because a significant fraction of the incident H gas
becomes excited collisionally before becoming ionized in moderate velocity shocks.
Both HH 111 and HH 47 exhibit multiple bow shocks along the channel of the jet, and in some
cases we observe the classical double shock structure of a bow shock/Mach disk expected
within the working surface of a jet. The jet material is considerably denser than that of
the ambient gas. Ejection angles vary a few degrees with time, giving some jets
a `wiggling' appearance. However, motion along the jet appears to be radial; there
is no convincing evidence for azimuthal motion in the radial velocity data. Multiple
bow shocks observed along the jets probably arise from unsteady accretion of a protostellar
disk onto the central object.
IAU Symposium 163, Accretion Phenomnena and Related Outflows