Single peaked CO emission line profiles from the inner regions of protoplanetary disks
J.E. Bast, J.M. Brown, G.J. Herczeg, E.F. van Dishoeck, K.M., Pontoppidan

TL;DR
This paper investigates single-peaked CO emission line profiles in protoplanetary disks, suggesting they originate from a combination of inner disk emission and slow disk winds, challenging the traditional Keplerian disk interpretation.
Contribution
It introduces a new interpretation for single-peaked CO line profiles, proposing a combination of inner disk emission and disk winds as their origin.
Findings
Line profiles are symmetric with high line/continuum ratios.
Profiles are formed within a few AU of the star.
Non-Keplerian mechanisms like winds likely produce these profiles.
Abstract
The study of warm molecular gas in the inner region (<10 AU) of circumstellar disks around young stars is of significant importance to understand how planets are forming. This inner zone of disks can now be explored in unprecedented detail with the high spectral (R=100000) and spatial resolution spectrometer CRIRES at the VLT. This paper investigates a set of disks that show CO ro-vibrational v=1-0 4.7 micron emission line profiles characterized by a single, narrow peak and a broad base extending to > 50 km/s, not readily explained by just Keplerian motions of gas in the inner disk. The line profiles are very symmetric, have high line/continuum ratios and have central velocity shifts of <5 km/s relative to the stellar radial velocity. The disks in this subsample are accreting onto their central stars at high rates relative to the parent sample. All disks show CO lines from v=2,…
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