Optical spectroscopy of Gaia detected protostars with DOT: can we probe protostellar photospheres?
Mayank Narang, Manoj Puravankara, Himanshu Tyagi, Prasanta K. Nayak,, Saurabh Sharma, Arun Surya, Bihan Banerjee, Blesson Mathew, Arpan Ghosh and, Aayushi Verma

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that, under specific conditions, protostars can be observed at optical wavelengths, allowing direct spectroscopic analysis of their photospheres and accretion properties, which was previously challenging due to high extinction.
Contribution
We present the first optical spectra of deeply embedded protostars with detectable photospheric features, revealing early photosphere formation and comparable accretion rates to T-Tauri stars.
Findings
Detected optical counterparts for 62 protostars in Orion.
Obtained spectra showing photospheric features in 4 protostars.
Derived mass accretion rates similar to T-Tauri stars.
Abstract
Optical spectroscopy offers the most direct view of the stellar properties and the accretion indicators. Standard accretion tracers, such as , , and, Ca II triplet lines, and most photospheric features, fall in the optical wavelengths. However, these tracers are not readily observable from deeply embedded protostars because of the large line of sight extinction (Av 50-100 mag) toward them. In some cases, however, it is possible to observe protostars at optical wavelengths if the outflow cavity is aligned along the line-of-sight that allows observations of the photosphere, or the envelope is very tenuous and thin such that the extinction is low. In such cases, we can not only detect these protostars at optical wavelengths but also follow up spectroscopically. We have used the HOPS catalog (Furlan et al. 2016) of protostars in Orion to search for optical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAtmospheric Ozone and Climate
