Shockingly low water abundances in Herschel / PACS observations of low-mass protostars in Perseus
A. Karska, L.E. Kristensen, E.F. van Dishoeck, M.N. Drozdovskaya, J.C., Mottram, G.J. Herczeg, S. Bruderer, S. Cabrit, N.J. Evans II, D. Fedele, A., Gusdorf, J.K. Jorgensen, M.J. Kaufman, G.J. Melnick, D.A. Neufeld, B. Nisini,, G. Santangelo, M. Tafalla, S.F. Wampfler

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel/PACS observations of low-mass protostars in Perseus to find that water abundances are much lower than shock models predict, suggesting UV radiation influences shock chemistry.
Contribution
It provides the first uniform survey of far-infrared molecular lines in low-mass protostars, revealing discrepancies with existing shock models and proposing UV radiation as a key factor.
Findings
Observed line ratios are consistent across sources.
H$_2$O line ratios indicate pre-shock densities around 10^5 cm$^{-3}$.
H$_2$O-to-CO ratios are much lower than model predictions.
Abstract
Protostars interact with their surroundings through jets and winds impacting on the envelope and creating shocks, but the nature of these shocks is still poorly understood. Our aim is to survey far-infrared molecular line emission from a uniform and significant sample of deeply-embedded low-mass young stellar objects in order to characterize shocks and the possible role of ultraviolet radiation in the immediate protostellar environment. Herschel/PACS spectral maps of 22 objects in the Perseus molecular cloud were obtained as part of the `William Herschel Line Legacy' survey. Line emission from HO, CO, and OH is tested against shock models from the literature. Observed line ratios are remarkably similar and do not show variations with source physical parameters. Observations show good agreement with the shock models when line ratios of the same species are compared. Ratios…
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