Searching for gas emission lines in Spitzer Infrared Spectrograph (IRS) spectra of young stars in Taurus
C. Baldovin-Saavedra, M. Audard, M. G\"udel, L. M. Rebull, D. L., Padgett, S. L. Skinner, A. Carmona, A. M. Glauser, and S. B. Fajardo-Acosta

TL;DR
This study analyzes Spitzer IRS spectra of 64 young stars in Taurus to detect gas emission lines, revealing correlations with star-disk parameters and suggesting outflows and jets as primary emission sources.
Contribution
First comprehensive analysis of gas emission lines in Taurus young stars using Spitzer/IRS, linking line luminosities to star-disk system properties and outflow activity.
Findings
[Ne II] emission is higher in jet-driving objects but not statistically significant.
[Ne II] luminosity correlates with X-ray luminosity and disk mass in Class II objects.
[Fe II] luminosity correlates with mass accretion rate.
Abstract
Our knowledge of circumstellar disks has traditionally been based on studies of dust. However, gas dominates the disk mass and its study is key to understand the star and planet formation process. Spitzer can access gas emission lines in the mid-infrared, providing new diagnostics of the physical conditions in accretion disks and outflows. We have studied the spectra of 64 pre-main-sequence stars in Taurus using Spitzer/IRS observations. We have detected H2 (17.03, 28.22 m) emission in 6 objects, [Ne II] (12.81 m) in 18 objects, and [Fe II] (17.93, 25.99 m) in 7 objects. [Ne II] detections are found primarily in Class II objects. The luminosity of the [Ne II] line, is in general higher for objects known to drive jets than for those without known jets, but the two groups are not statistically distinguishable. We have searched for correlations between the line luminosities…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
