Probing episodic accretion with chemistry: CALYPSO observations of IRAM 04191+1522. Results from the CALYPSO IRAM-PdBI survey
S. Anderl, S. Maret, S. Cabrit, A. J. Maury, A. Belloche, Ph. Andr\'e,, A. Bacmann, C. Codella, L. Podio, F. Gueth

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution molecular line observations and chemical modeling to investigate episodic accretion events in a very low-luminosity object, revealing a recent accretion burst that impacts its evolution.
Contribution
It demonstrates that chemical signatures can trace past accretion bursts, providing new insights into early star formation processes in VeLLOs.
Findings
N2H+ emission shows a central hole indicating past burst activity.
C18O emission is compact and inconsistent with current luminosity.
A past accretion burst occurred a few hundred years ago.
Abstract
Context. The process of mass accretion in the earliest phases of star formation is still not fully understood: Does the accretion rate smoothly decline with the age of the protostar or are there short, intermittent accretion bursts? Aims. We aim to explore whether or not the observed CO and NH emission pattern towards the VeLLO IRAM 04191+1522 can be understood in the framework of a scenario where the emission is chemically tracing a past accretion burst. Methods.We used high-angular-resolution Plateau de Bure Interferometer (PdBI) observations of CO and NH towards IRAM 04191+1522 that were obtained as part of the CALYPSO IRAM Large Program. We model these observations using a chemical code with a time-dependent physical structure coupled with a radiative transfer module, where we allow for variations in the source luminosity. Results. We find that the…
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