Signatures of warm carbon monoxide in protoplanetary discs observed with Herschel SPIRE
M. H. D. van der Wiel (1), D. A. Naylor (1), I. Kamp (2), F. M\'enard, (3, 4), W.-F. Thi (5, 4), P. Woitke (6), G. Olofsson (7), K. M., Pontoppidan (8), J. Di Francesco (9, 10), A. M. Glauser (11), J. S., Greaves (6), R. J. Ivison (12, 13) ((1) U of Lethbridge, Canada, (2)

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel SPIRE spectroscopy to detect warm CO gas in 18 protoplanetary discs, revealing line emissions that inform models of disc chemistry and physical conditions, especially around Herbig Ae/Be stars.
Contribution
First comprehensive far-infrared spectroscopic survey of protoplanetary discs revealing CO signatures and comparing them with detailed physical-chemical models.
Findings
Strong CO line emission observed in discs around Herbig Ae/Be stars.
Detected $^{13}$CO lines in HD 100546 exceed model predictions.
Line emission is present in some T Tauri discs, but not all.
Abstract
Molecular gas constitutes the dominant mass component of protoplanetary discs. To date, these sources have not been studied comprehensively at the longest far-infrared and shortest submillimetre wavelengths. This paper presents Herschel SPIRE FTS spectroscopic observations toward 18 protoplanetary discs, covering the entire 450-1540 GHz (666-195 m) range at R~400-1300. The spectra reveal clear detections of the dust continuum and, in six targets, a significant amount of spectral line emission primarily attributable to CO rotational lines. Other targets exhibit little to no detectable spectral lines. Low signal-to-noise detections also include signatures from CO, [CI] and HCN. For completeness, we present upper limits of non-detected lines in all targets, including low-energy transitions of H2O and CH molecules. The ten CO lines that fall within the SPIRE…
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