Dense and warm molecular gas in the envelopes and outflows of southern low-mass protostars
T.A. van Kempen (Leiden, CfA Harvard), E.F. van Dishoeck (Leiden,, MPE), M.R. Hogerheijde (Leiden), R.Guesten (MPIfR Bonn)

TL;DR
This study uses high-excitation molecular line observations to analyze the dense gas, envelopes, and outflows of 16 southern low-mass protostars, revealing properties like temperature, density, and evolutionary status.
Contribution
It provides detailed molecular line data to characterize protostellar environments, identifying embedded YSOs and outflow properties with new observational insights.
Findings
Most sources have dense, warm gas indicative of protostellar envelopes.
Strong molecular outflows are detected around six sources.
Some Class I sources are not embedded YSOs based on molecular line diagnostics.
Abstract
Observations of dense molecular gas lie at the basis of our understanding of the density and temperature structure of protostellar envelopes and molecular outflows. We aim to characterize the properties of the protostellar envelope, molecular outflow and surrounding cloud, through observations of high excitation molecular lines within a sample of 16 southern sources presumed to be embedded YSOs. Observations of submillimeter lines of CO, HCO+ and their isotopologues, both single spectra and small maps were taken with the FLASH and APEX-2a instruments mounted on APEX to trace the gas around the sources. The HARP-B instrument on the JCMT was used to map IRAS 15398-3359 in these lines. HCO+ mapping probes the presence of dense centrally condensed gas, a characteristic of protostellar envelopes. The rare isotopologues C18O and H13CO+ are also included to determine the optical depth, column…
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