The Complex Protostellar Source IRAS 04325+2402
Hartmann, Lee; Calvet, Nuria; Jayawardhana, Ray; Allen, Lori; Chen, Hua
United States
Abstract
We report Hubble Space Telescope near-infrared NICMOS observations of a remarkable low-luminosity Class I (protostellar) source in the Taurus Molecular Cloud. IRAS 04325+2402 exhibits a complex bipolar scattered light nebula. The central continuum source is resolved and may be multiple, or it may be crossed by a small dust lane. Complex arcs seen in scattered light surround the central source; the physical nature of these structures is not clear, but they may reflect perturbations from multiple stellar sources or from time-dependent mass ejection. A second, resolved continuum source is found at a projected distance of approximately 1150 AU from the central region, near the edge of a nebular lobe probably produced by outflow. The images indicate that this second source is another low-luminosity young stellar object, seen nearly edge-on through a dusty disk and envelope system with disk diameter of about 60 AU. We suggest that the scattered light ``streaks'' associated with this second source are limb-brightened outflow cavities in the dusty envelope, possibly perturbed by interaction with the outflow lobes of the main source. The nature of the companion is uncertain, since it is observed mostly in scattered light. But it is most probably a very low mass star or brown dwarf, with a minimum luminosity of approximately 10^-2 L_solar. Our results show that protostellar sources may have multiple centers of infall and nonaligned disks and outflows, even on relatively small scales.