Interferometric view of the circumstellar envelopes of northern FU Orionis-type stars
O. Feh\'er, \'A. K\'osp\'al, P. \'Abrah\'am, M. R. Hogerheijde, C., Brinch

TL;DR
This study uses interferometric observations of CO emission to analyze the circumstellar envelopes of FU Orionis-type stars, revealing diverse evolutionary stages from embedded to more evolved objects, and highlighting their transitional nature.
Contribution
First detailed interferometric analysis of circumstellar envelopes around multiple FU Orionis-type stars, linking envelope properties to evolutionary stages.
Findings
Detected extended CO emission around all targets.
Identified small-scale CO clumps associated with five objects.
Observed traces of outflow activity in three stars.
Abstract
FU Orionis-type objects are young, low-mass stars with large outbursts in visible light that last for several years or decades. They are thought to represent an evolutionary phase during the life of every young star when accretion from the circumstellar disk is enhanced during recurring time periods. These outbursts are able to rapidly build up the star while affecting the circumstellar disk and thus the ongoing or future planet formation. In many models infall from a circumstellar envelope seems to be necessary to trigger the outbursts. We observed the J=10 rotational transition of CO and CO towards eight northern FU Orionis-type stars (V1057 Cyg, V1515 Cyg, V2492 Cyg, V2493 Cyg, V1735 Cyg, V733 Cep, RNO 1B and RNO 1C) and derive temperatures and envelope masses and discuss the morphology and kinematics of the circumstellar material. We detected extended CO emission…
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