Herschel Key Program, "Dust, Ice, and Gas In Time" (DIGIT): the origin of molecular and atomic emission in low-mass protostars in Taurus
Jeong-Eun Lee, Jinhee Lee, Seokho Lee, Neal J. Evans II, and Joel D., Green

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel-PACS observations of six low-mass protostars in Taurus to analyze atomic and molecular emissions, revealing insights into shock properties, gas cooling, and outflow dynamics in star formation regions.
Contribution
It provides new observational data on the distribution and excitation of atomic and molecular lines in low-mass protostars, highlighting differences in shock conditions and gas cooling mechanisms.
Findings
Atomic lines correlate well with each other, as do molecular lines.
CO contributes about 30% to total gas cooling across sources.
H2O is mostly subthermally excited, with variations in photodissociation levels.
Abstract
Six low-mass embedded sources (L1489, L1551-IRS5, TMR1, TMC1-A, L1527, and TMC1) in Taurus have been observed with Herschel-PACS to cover the full spectrum from 50 to 210 m as part of the Herschel key program, "Dust, Ice, and Gas In Time (DIGIT)". The relatively low intensity of the interstellar radiation field surrounding Taurus minimizes contamination of the [C II] emission associated with the sources by diffuse emission from the cloud surface, allowing study of the [C II] emission from the source. In several sources, the [C II] emission is distributed along the outflow, as is the [O I] emission. The atomic line luminosities correlate well with each other, as do the molecular lines, but the atomic and molecular lines correlate poorly. The relative contribution of CO to the total gas cooling is constant at 30 %, while the cooling fraction by HO varies from source to…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
