The evolution of far-infrared CO emission from protostars
P. Manoj, J. D. Green, S. T. Megeath, N. J. Evans II, A. M. Stutz, J., J. Tobin, D. M. Watson, W. J. Fischer, E. Furlan, T. Henning

TL;DR
This study examines how far-infrared CO emission from protostars correlates with their luminosity and evolutionary stage, revealing that emission traces current mass loss and accretion rates, which are episodic and decrease over time.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis linking far-IR CO emission to protostellar properties, demonstrating the episodic nature of accretion and ejection processes.
Findings
Strong correlation between far-IR CO luminosity and bolometric luminosity.
No significant correlation between CO emission and evolutionary indicators.
Episodic accretion and ejection rates decrease with protostar age.
Abstract
We investigate the evolution of far-IR CO emission from protostars observed with Herschel/PACS for 50 sources from the combined sample of HOPS and DIGIT Herschel key programs. From the uniformly sampled spectral energy distributions, we computed , and for these sources to search for correlations between far-IR CO emission and protostellar properties. We find a strong and tight correlation between far-IR CO luminosity () and the bolometric luminosity () of the protostars with . We, however, do not find a strong correlation between and protostellar evolutionary indicators, and . FIR CO emission from protostars traces the currently shocked gas by jets/outflows, and $L^{\rm…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Molecular Spectroscopy and Structure · Atmospheric Ozone and Climate
