c2d Spitzer IRS spectra of embedded low-mass young stars: gas-phase emission lines
Fred Lahuis, Ewine F. van Dishoeck, Jes K. J{\o}rgensen, Geoffrey A., Blake, Neal J. Evans II

TL;DR
This study analyzes mid-infrared gas-phase emission lines in 43 embedded low-mass young stars using Spitzer IRS spectra, revealing spatially resolved features that inform on physical processes like shocks, outflows, and disk emissions.
Contribution
It introduces an optimal spectral extraction method to distinguish between compact and extended emission, providing new insights into the physical origins of gas emission in embedded protostars.
Findings
Extended emission mainly from PDRs in outflow cavities
Compact emission likely from disks and jets
Detection of hot H2O emission in some sources
Abstract
A survey of mid-IR gas-phase emission lines of H2, H2O and various atoms toward a sample of 43 embedded low-mass young stars in nearby star-forming regions is presented. The sources are selected from the Spitzer "Cores to Disks" (c2d) legacy program. The environment of embedded protostars is complex both in its physical structure (envelopes, outflows, jets, protostellar disks) and the physical processes (accretion, irradiation by UV and/or X-rays, excitation through slow and fast shocks) which take place. A key point is to spatially resolve the emission in the Spitzer-IRS spectra. An optimal extraction method is used to separate both spatially unresolved (compact, up to a few 100 AU) and spatially resolved (extended, 1000 AU or more) emission from the IRS spectra. The results are compared with the c2d disk sample and literature PDR and shock models to address the physical nature of the…
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