High resolution spectroscopy of Ne II emission from young stellar objects
G.G. Sacco, E. Flaccomio, I. Pascucci, F. Lahuis, B. Ercolano, J.H., Kastner, G. Micela, B. Stelzer, M.Sterzik

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution mid-infrared spectroscopy to distinguish the origins of [Ne II] emission in young stellar objects, revealing different emission regions and dynamics in various disk evolutionary stages.
Contribution
First high-resolution spectroscopic observations of [Ne II] in young stellar objects, clarifying emission origins and disk wind signatures, and testing irradiated disk models.
Findings
[Ne II] emission in Class I objects mainly from shocks beyond 20-40 AU.
In transition disks, emission is confined within 20-40 AU.
Line profiles show slight blue-shifts and correlation with disk inclination, indicating disk wind activity.
Abstract
Constraining the spatial and thermal structure of the gaseous component of circumstellar disks is crucial to understand star and planet formation. Models predict that the [Ne II] line at 12.81 {\mu}m detected in young stellar objects with Spitzer traces disk gas and its response to high energy radiation, but such [Ne II] emission may also originate in shocks within powerful outflows. To distinguish between these potential origins for mid-infrared [Ne II] emission and to constrain disk models, we observed 32 young stellar objects using the high resolution (R~30000) mid-infrared spectrograph VISIR at the VLT. We detected the 12.81 {\mu}m [Ne II] line in 12 objects, tripling the number of detections of this line in young stellar objects with high spatial and spectral resolution spectrographs. We obtain the following main results: a) In Class I objects the [Ne II] emission observed from…
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