Molecular Tracers of Embedded Star Formation in Ophiuchus
Melissa Gurney, Rene Plume, Doug Johnstone

TL;DR
This study uses molecular line observations of nine cores in Ophiuchus to assess their star formation activity and evolutionary state, highlighting the potential and limitations of CO isotopologues as indicators.
Contribution
It demonstrates the effectiveness of combining molecular line data with dust emission to evaluate core evolution, serving as a pilot for larger surveys.
Findings
Line wings indicate outflows in several cores
Spectral asymmetries suggest infall activity
Comparison with Spitzer data supports classification accuracy
Abstract
In this paper we analyze nine SCUBA cores in Ophiuchus using the second-lowest rotational transitions of four molecular species (12CO, 13CO, C18O, and C17O) to search for clues to the evolutionary state and star-formation activity within each core. Specifically, we look for evidence of outflows, infall, and CO depletion. The line wings in the CO spectra are used to detect outflows, spectral asymmetries in 13CO are used to determine infall characteristics, and a comparison of the dust emission (from SCUBA observations) and gas emission (from C18O) is used to determine the fractional CO freeze-out. Through comparison with Spitzer observations of protostellar sources in Ophiuchus, we discuss the usefulness of CO and its isotopologues as the sole indicators of the evolutionary state of each core. This study is an important pilot project for the JCMT Legacy Survey of the Gould Belt (GBS)…
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