ERIK MARTIN WILLÈN
Author of science fiction
Monday, December 29, 2025
Dazzling cosmic jet reveals time-stamped history of star birth - Astronomy & Space - UNIVERSE
A "tomographic" ALMA view
revealing how the supersonic protostellar jet from SVS 13 interacts with the
surrounding ambient medium. In the background, a Hubble Space Telescope (HST)
image shows the cavity carved out by the outflow, along with the striking
Herbig–Haro knots visible at optical wavelengths. The box in the HST image
indicates the region shown in the ALMA images. The color of the frames in these
images indicates the velocity, ranging from 35 km/s (red) to 97 km/s (blue).
Credit: G. Blázquez-Calero, M. Osorio, G. Anglada. Background image credit:
ESA/Hubble & NASA/Karl Stapelfeldt.
An international team of astronomers
has uncovered the most unmistakable evidence yet that the powerful jets
launched by newborn stars reliably record a star's most violent growth
episodes, confirming a long-standing model of how these jets propagate through
their surroundings.
The study, "Bowshocks driven
by the pole-on molecular jet of outbursting protostar SVS 132," is published in Nature Astronomy.
Discovery of SVS 13's unique features
Early observations with the U.S.
National Science Foundation Very Large Array (NSF VLA) identified SVS 13 as a
remarkable binary protostellar system driving a chain of high-velocity
"molecular bullets" and Herbig–Haro shocks in the NGC 1333 star-forming
region, about 1,000 light-years from Earth.
Those NSF VLA continuum images
pinpointed the two radio protostars, VLA 4A and VLA 4B. They revealed the
larger-scale outflow, which flagged this system as a prime target for deeper
investigation into how young stars launch and collimate jets. This decades-long
NSF VLA groundwork enabled the identification of the protostar powering the jet
now seen in unprecedented detail.
ALMA observations reveal jet structure
Building on that legacy, new
observations with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA)
zoomed in on the brightest high-velocity "bullet" in the SVS 13
outflow. They revealed a striking sequence of nested molecular rings.
As the observed velocity changes,
each ring smoothly shrinks and shifts position, tracing ultra-thin, bow-shaped
shells only a few dozen astronomical units thick and moving at speeds of up to
about 100 kilometers per second. This tomographic view works much like a
medical CT scan, allowing astronomers to reconstruct how the jet carves its way
through surrounding gas.
Jets as records of stellar outbursts
"Our observations show that
these jets are not just dramatic side effects of star birth—they are also
faithful record-keepers," said Guillermo Blázquez-Calero, co-lead author
of the study and a researcher at the Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía,
CSIC (IAA-CSIC). "Each sequence of rings in the jet carries a time-stamp
of a past outburst, letting us read the history of how material fell onto the
young star and was then violently ejected back into its environment."
By fitting more than 400 individual
rings, the team demonstrated that each shell matches a textbook
momentum-conserving bow shock driven by a narrow jet whose speed changes over
time. The age of the youngest shell aligns with a powerful optical and infrared
outburst of SVS 13 VLA 4B in the early 1990s, providing the first direct link
between bursts of material falling onto a young star and changes in the speed
of its jet.
These results show that protostellar jets preserve a time-stamped record of past eruptions, offering new insight into how episodic outbursts shape the disks that eventually give rise to planets like Earth.
Provided by ALMA Observatory
edited by Lisa Lock, reviewed by Robert Egan
Source: Dazzling
cosmic jet reveals time-stamped history of star birth

