Disks and Outflows in CO Rovibrational Emission from Embedded, Low-Mass Young Stellar Objects
Gregory J. Herczeg, Joanna M. Brown, Ewine F. van Dishoeck, and Klaus, M. Pontoppidan

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution spectra to analyze CO rovibrational emission in embedded low-mass young stellar objects, revealing disk and wind structures within a few AU, and distinguishing features based on luminosity and velocity profiles.
Contribution
It provides detailed characterization of CO emission components in embedded YSOs, demonstrating the utility of CO fundamental emission as a probe of very young disks and winds.
Findings
CO emission detected in 14 of 18 YSOs
Broad emission linked to warm inner disks, more common in less luminous YSOs
Narrow lines indicate cooler gas and possible wind origins
Abstract
Young circumstellar disks that are still embedded in dense molecular envelopes may differ from their older counterparts, but are historically difficult to study because emission from a disk can be confused with envelope or outflow emission. CO fundamental emission is a potentially powerful probe of the disk/wind structure within a few AU of young protostars. In this paper, we present high spectral (R=90,000) and spatial (0.3") resolution VLT/CRIRES M-band spectra of 18 low-mass young stellar objects (YSOs) with dense envelopes in nearby star-froming regions to explore the utility of CO fundamental 4.6 micron emission as a probe of very young disks. CO fundamental emission is detected from 14 of the YSOs in our sample. The emission line profiles show a range of strengths and shapes, but can generally be classified into a broad, warm component and a narrow, cool component. The broad CO…
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