Velocity-resolved high-J CO emission from massive star-forming clumps
Hoang Thanh Dat, Agata Karska, Min Young Lee, Friedrich Wyrowski, Le, Ngoc Tram, Aiyuan Y. Yang, Karl M. Menten

TL;DR
This study uses velocity-resolved far-infrared CO spectra to analyze gas kinematics and physical conditions in massive star-forming regions, revealing outflows and consistent excitation mechanisms across different evolutionary stages.
Contribution
It provides a new sample of velocity-resolved high-J CO spectra in massive star-forming clumps, highlighting outflows and physical conditions without clear evolutionary trends.
Findings
High-J CO emission shows broad wings linked to outflows.
Gas temperatures are narrowly distributed between 120-220 K.
CO line fluxes correlate with bolometric luminosity across diverse sources.
Abstract
(Abridged) Context. Massive star formation is associated with energetic processes, which result in significant gas cooling via far-infrared (IR) lines. Velocity-resolved observations can constrain the kinematics of the gas, allowing the identification of the physical mechanisms responsible for gas heating. Aims. Our aim is to quantify far-infrared CO line emission toward high-mass star-forming regions, identify the high-velocity gas component associated with outflows, and estimate the physical conditions required for the excitation of the observed lines. Methods. Velocity-resolved SOFIA/GREAT spectra of 13 high-mass star forming clumps of various luminosities and evolutionary stages are studied using CO 11-10 and 16-15 lines. Results. All targets show strong high-J CO emission in the far-IR, characterized by broad line wings associated with outflows, thereby significantly increasing the…
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