Millimeter interferometric observations of FU Orionis-type objects in Cygnus
\'Agnes K\'osp\'al

TL;DR
This study uses millimeter interferometry to analyze the molecular envelopes around FU Orionis-type stars, revealing diverse envelope structures and emphasizing the importance of high-resolution observations for understanding their evolution.
Contribution
First mm interferometric observations of FUors' envelopes are presented, providing detailed spatial and velocity structures that challenge single-beam measurement assumptions.
Findings
Detected spatially resolved 13CO emission in all sources
Envelope sizes range from compact to extended, with some offset emissions
Interferometry is crucial for accurate circumstellar environment analysis
Abstract
FU Orionis-type objects (FUors) are low-mass young eruptive stars that represent an evolutionary phase characterized by episodic periods of increased accretion rate from the disk to the star. Theory predicts that a circumstellar envelope, the source of continuous mass infall onto the disk, is necessary for triggering such accretion bursts. We study the spatial and velocity structure of envelopes around FUors by means of molecular line observations at mm wavelengths. We target three prototypical FUors and an object possibly in a pre-outburst state. We present archival PdBI interferometric observations of the J=1-0 line of 13CO at 110.2 GHz. For three of our targets, these represent the first mm interferometric observations. The data allow the study of the molecular environment of the objects on a spatial resolution of a thousand AU and a velocity resolution of 0.2 km/s. Strong, narrow…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Space Exploration and Technology
