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PROSAC: A Submillimeter Array Survey of Low-Mass Protostars. I. Overview of Program: Envelopes, Disks, Outflows, and Hot Cores

Jes K. Jørgensen et al 2007 ApJ 659 479-498   doi: 10.1086/512230  Help

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Jes K. Jørgensen1, Tyler L. Bourke1, Philip C. Myers1, James Di Francesco2, Ewine F. van Dishoeck3, Chin-Fei Lee4, Nagayoshi Ohashi5, Fredrik L. Schöier6, Shigehisa Takakuwa7, David J. Wilner1 and Qizhou Zhang1
1 Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Cambridge, MA 02138
2 Herzberg Institute of Astrophysics, National Research Council of Canada, Victoria, BC V9E 2E7, Canada
3 Leiden Observatory, NL-2300 RA Leiden, Netherlands
4 Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Submillimeter Array Project, Hilo, HI 96720
5 Academia Sinica Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics, Taipei 106, Taiwan
6 Stockholm Observatory, AlbaNova, SE-106 91, Stockholm, Sweden
7 National Astronomical Observatory of Japan, ALMA Project Office, Mitaka, Tokyo 181-8588, Japan
E-mail: jjorgensen@cfa.harvard.edu

ABSTRACT. This paper presents a large spectral line and continuum survey of eight deeply embedded, low-mass protostellar cores using the SMA. High-excitation line emission from 11 molecular species originating in warm and dense gas has been imaged at high angular resolution (1''-3'', typically 200-600 AU) together with continuum emission at 230 GHz (1.3 mm) and 345 GHz (0.8 mm). Compact continuum emission is observed for all sources, which likely originates in marginally optically thick circumstellar disks, with typical lower limits to their masses of 0.1 Msun (1%-10% of the masses of their envelopes) and a dust opacity law, κν vprop νβ, with β approx 1. Prominent collimated outflows are present in CO 2-1 observations in all sources. The most diffuse outflows are found in the sources with the lowest ratios of disk to envelope mass, and it is suggested that these sources are in a phase where accretion of matter from the envelope has almost finished and the remainder of the envelope material is being dispersed by the outflows. Other characteristic dynamical signatures are inverse P Cygni profiles indicative of infalling motions seen in the 13CO 2-1 lines toward NGC 1333 IRAS 4A and NGC 1333 IRAS 4B. Outflow-induced shocks are present on all scales in the protostellar environments and are most clearly traced by the emission of CH3OH in NGC 1333 IRAS 4A and NGC 1333 IRAS 4B. These observations suggest that the emission of CH3OH and H2CO from these proposed ``hot corinos'' is related to the shocks caused by the protostellar outflows. Only one source, NGC 1333 IRAS 2A, has evidence for hot, compact CH3OH emission coincident with the embedded protostar.

Subject headings: circumstellar matter; dust, extinction; ISM: jets and outflows; ISM: molecules; stars: formation; techniques: interferometric

Print publication: Issue 1 (2007 April 10)
Received 2006 August 28, accepted for publication 2006 December 21

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