Linking low- to high-mass YSOs with Herschel-HIFI observations of water
I. San Jose-Garcia, J. C. Mottram, E. F. van Dishoeck, L. E., Kristensen, F. F. S. van der Tak, J. Braine, F. Herpin, D. Johnstone, T. A., van Kempen, F. Wyrowski

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel-HIFI water and CO observations to analyze shock dynamics in young stellar objects across a wide luminosity range, revealing consistent shock origins and scaling relations applicable from low- to high-mass YSOs.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of water and CO line profiles in YSOs, demonstrating the common shock origin of certain emission components across different mass regimes and establishing a luminosity correlation.
Findings
H2O line profiles show two main components: cavity shocks and quiescent envelope material.
Over 60% of H2O emission originates from cavity shocks in all YSOs.
A strong linear correlation exists between H2O luminosity and bolometric luminosity.
Abstract
Water probes the dynamics in young stellar objects (YSOs) effectively, especially shocks in molecular outflows. It is a key molecule for exploring whether the physical properties of low-mass protostars can be extrapolated to massive YSOs. As part of the WISH key programme, we investigate the dynamics and the excitation conditions of shocks along the outflow cavity wall as function of source luminosity. Velocity-resolved Herschel-HIFI spectra of the H2O 988, 752, 1097 GHz and 12CO J=10-9, 16-15 lines were analysed for 52 YSOs with bolometric luminosities (L_bol) ranging from <1 to >10^5 L_sun. The profiles of the H2O lines are similar, indicating that they probe the same gas. We see two main Gaussian emission components in all YSOs: a broad component associated with non-dissociative shocks in the outflow cavity wall (cavity shocks) and a narrow component associated with quiescent…
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