Chemical tracers of episodic accretion in low-mass protostars
Ruud Visser (1,2), Edwin A. Bergin (2), Jes K. Jorgensen (3) ((1) ESO, Garching, (2) Univ. of Michigan, (3) Univ. of Copenhagen)

TL;DR
This study uses chemical modeling and spectral simulations to investigate how episodic accretion bursts in low-mass protostars affect molecular line emissions, proposing potential tracers for these events.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive simulation framework linking accretion bursts to observable molecular spectral signatures in protostars.
Findings
CO evaporation persists for 10^3-10^4 years after bursts.
HCO+ abundance increases during bursts, N2H+ decreases.
Spectral signatures of bursts can last up to 10^5 years.
Abstract
Aims: Accretion rates in low-mass protostars can be highly variable in time. Each accretion burst is accompanied by a temporary increase in luminosity, heating up the circumstellar envelope and altering the chemical composition of the gas and dust. This paper aims to study such chemical effects and discusses the feasibility of using molecular spectroscopy as a tracer of episodic accretion rates and timescales. Methods: We simulate a strong accretion burst in a diverse sample of 25 spherical envelope models by increasing the luminosity to 100 times the observed value. Using a comprehensive gas-grain network, we follow the chemical evolution during the burst and for up to 10^5 yr after the system returns to quiescence. The resulting abundance profiles are fed into a line radiative transfer code to simulate rotational spectra of C18O, HCO+, H13CO+, and N2H+ at a series of time steps. We…
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