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IPA: Class 0 Protostars Viewed in CO Emission Using JWST

Authors :
Rubinstein, Adam E.
Evans II, Neal J.
Tyagi, Himanshu
Narang, Mayank
Nazari, Pooneh
Gutermuth, Robert
Federman, Samuel
Manoj, P.
Green, Joel D.
Watson, Dan M.
Megeath, S. Thomas
Rocha, Will R. M.
Brunken, Nashanty G. C.
Slavicinska, Katerina
van Dishoeck, Ewine F.
Beuther, Henrik
Bourke, Tyler L.
Garatti, Alessio Caratti o
Hartmann, Lee
Klaassen, Pamela
Linz, Hendrik
Looney, Leslie W.
Muzerolle, James
Stanke, Thomas
Tobin, John J.
Wolk, Scott J.
Yang, Yao-Lun
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

We investigate the bright CO fundamental emission in the central regions of five protostars in their primary mass assembly phase using new observations from JWST's Near-Infrared Spectrograph (NIRSpec) and Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI). CO line emission images and fluxes are extracted for a forest of $\sim$150 ro-vibrational transitions from two vibrational bands, $v=1-0$ and $v=2-1$. However, ${}^{13}$CO is undetected, indicating that ${}^{12}$CO emission is optically thin. We use H$_2$ emission lines to correct fluxes for extinction and then construct rotation diagrams for the CO lines with the highest spectral resolution and sensitivity to estimate rotational temperatures and numbers of CO molecules. Two distinct rotational temperature components are required for $v=1$ ($\sim600$ to 1000 K and 2000 to $\sim 10^4$ K), while one hotter component is required for $v=2$ ($\gtrsim 3500$ K). ${}^{13}$CO is depleted compared to the abundances found in the ISM, indicating selective UV photodissociation of ${}^{13}$CO; therefore, UV radiative pumping may explain the higher rotational temperatures in $v=2$. The average vibrational temperature is $\sim 1000$ K for our sources and is similar to the lowest rotational temperature components. Using the measured rotational and vibrational temperatures to infer a total number of CO molecules, we find that the total gas masses range from lower limits of $\sim10^{22}$ g for the lowest mass protostars to $\sim 10^{26}$ g for the highest mass protostars. Our gas mass lower limits are compatible with those in more evolved systems, which suggest the lowest rotational temperature component comes from the inner disk, scattered into our line of sight, but we also cannot exclude the contribution to the CO emission from disk winds for higher mass targets.<br />Comment: 31 pages, 7 figures, 4 tables, received to ApJ December 10 2023, accepted to ApJ August 4 2024

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2312.07807
Document Type :
Working Paper