CO bandhead emission of massive young stellar objects: determining disc properties
J. D. Ilee, H. E. Wheelwright, R. D. Oudmaijer, W. J. de Wit, L. T., Maud, M. G. Hoare, S. L. Lumsden, T. J. T. Moore, J. S. Urquhart, J. C., Mottram

TL;DR
This study analyzes high-resolution near-infrared spectra of 20 massive young stellar objects to investigate CO bandhead emission, providing evidence for small-scale gaseous discs around these objects and supporting disc accretion in massive star formation.
Contribution
It presents the largest sample analysis of CO bandhead emission in MYSOs and models the emission as originating from circumstellar discs, confirming their presence.
Findings
CO emission fits well with an analytic disc model
Discs are geometrically thin and within dust sublimation radius
Supports disc accretion as a formation mechanism for massive stars
Abstract
Massive stars play an important role in many areas of astrophysics, but numerous details regarding their formation remain unclear. In this paper we present and analyse high resolution (R ~ 30,000) near-infrared 2.3 micron spectra of 20 massive young stellar objects from the RMS database, in the largest such study of CO first overtone bandhead emission to date. We fit the emission under the assumption it originates from a circumstellar disc in Keplerian rotation. We explore three approaches to modelling the physical conditions within the disc - a disc heated mainly via irradiation from the central star, a disc heated mainly via viscosity, and a disc in which the temperature and density are described analytically. We find that the models described by heating mechanisms are inappropriate because they do not provide good fits to the CO emission spectra. We therefore restrict our analysis to…
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