Evolution of CO lines in time-dependent models of protostellar disk formation
Daniel Harsono (1, 2), Ruud Visser (3), Simon Bruderer (4), Ewine, F. van Dishoeck (1, 4), Lars E. Kristensen (1,5) ((1) Leiden Observatory,, (2) SRON, (3) Univ. of Michigan, (4) MPE Garching, (5) CfA)

TL;DR
This study models the evolution of molecular line emissions during low-mass star formation, revealing that CO excitation temperatures remain stable while near-IR lines probe inner disk evolution, aiding in disk detection.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive 2D axisymmetric model with radiative transfer to simulate molecular line evolution throughout protostellar development.
Findings
CO excitation temperature remains constant during evolution.
Near-IR lines probe the warm inner regions of protostellar disks.
High-resolution ALMA data are essential for detecting early disks.
Abstract
(Abridged) Star and planet formation theories predict an evolution in the density, temperature, and velocity structure as the envelope collapses and forms an accretion disk. The aim of this work is to model the evolution of the molecular excitation, line profiles, and related observables during low-mass star formation. Specifically, the signatures of disks during the deeply embedded stage are investigated. Semi-analytic 2D axisymmetric models have been used to describe the evolution of the density, stellar mass, and luminosity from the pre-stellar to the T-Tauri phase. A full radiative transfer calculation is carried out to accurately determine the time-dependent dust temperatures and CO abundance structure. We present non-LTE near-IR, FIR, and submm lines of CO have been simulated at a number of time steps. In contrast to the dust temperature, the CO excitation temperature derived from…
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