Up to now only a few intermediate-mass molecular outflows have been studied
with enough high-angular resolution. The aim of this work is to study in detail
the intermediate-mass YSO IRAS 22272+6358A, which is embedded in L1206, and its
molecular outflow, in order to investigate the interaction of the outflow with
the dense protostellar material, and to compare their properties with those of
lower mas counterparts. We carried out OVRO observations of the 2.7 mm
continuum emission, CO(1-0), C18O(1-0), and HC3N(12-11) in order to map with
high-angular resolution the core of L1206, and to derive the properties of the
dust emission, the molecular outflow and the dense protostellar envelope. The
2.7 mm continuum emission has been resolved into four sources, labeled OVRO~1,
2, 3, and 4. The intermediate-mass Class~0/I object OVRO 2, with a mass traced
by the dust emission of 14.2 Msun, is the source associated with IRAS
22272+6358A. The CO(1-0) observations have revealed a very collimated outflow
driven by OVRO 2, at a PA ~140 degr, that has a very weak southeastern red lobe
and a much stronger northwestern blue lobe. Photodissociation toward the red
lobe produced by the ionization front coming from the bright-rimmed diffuse HII
region could be responsible of the morphology of the outflow. The spatial
correlation between the outflow and the elongated dense protostellar material
traced by HC3N(12-11) suggests an interaction between the molecular outflow and
the protostellar envelope. Shocks produced by the molecular outflow, and
possibly by the shock front preceding the ionization front could account for
the southern enhancement of HC3N. The properties of the intermediate-mass
protostar OVRO 2 and the molecular outflow are consistent with those of lower
mass counterparts.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures, 5 tables. Accepted for publication by A&