266 research outputs found
The early evolution of viscous and self-gravitating circumstellar disks with a dust component
The long-term evolution of a circumstellar disk starting from its formation
and ending in the T Tauri phase was simulated numerically with the purpose of
studying the evolution of dust in the disk with distinct values of viscous
\alpha-parameter and dust fragmentation velocity v_frag. We solved numerical
hydrodynamics equations in the thin-disk limit, which are modified to include a
dust component consisting of two parts: sub-micron-sized dust and grown dust
with a maximum radius a_r. The former is strictly coupled to the gas, while the
latter interacts with the gas via friction. The conversion of small to grown
dust, dust growth, and dust self-gravity are also considered. We found that the
process of dust growth known for the older protoplanetary phase also holds for
the embedded phase of disk evolution. The dust growth efficiency depends on the
radial distance from the star - a_r is largest in the inner disk and gradually
declines with radial distance. In the inner disk, a_r is limited by the dust
fragmentation barrier. The process of small-to-grown dust conversion is very
fast once the disk is formed. The total mass of grown dust in the disk (beyond
1 AU) reaches tens or even hundreds of Earth masses already in the embedded
phase of star formation and even a greater amount of grown dust drifts in the
inner, unresolved 1 AU of the disk. Dust does not usually grow to radii greater
than a few cm. A notable exception are models with \alpha <= 10^{-3}, in which
case a zone with reduced mass transport develops in the inner disk and dust can
grow to meter-sized boulders in the inner 10 AU. Grown dust drifts inward and
accumulates in the inner disk regions. This effect is most pronounced in the
\alpha <= 10^{-3} models where several hundreds of Earth masses can be
accumulated in a narrow region of several AU from the star by the end of
embedded phase. (abridged).Comment: accepted by Astronomy & Astrophysic
Detection of 40-48 GHz dust continuum linear polarization towards the Class 0 young stellar object IRAS 16293-2422
We performed the new JVLA full polarization observations at 40-48 GHz
(6.3-7.5 mm) towards the nearby ( 1473.4 pc) Class 0 YSO IRAS
16293-2422, and compare with the previous SMA observations reported by Rao et
al. (2009; 2014). We observed the quasar J1407+2827 which is weakly polarized
and can be used as a leakage term calibrator for 9 GHz observations, to
gauge the potential residual polarization leakage after calibration. We did not
detect Stokes Q, U, and V intensities from the observations of J1407+2827, and
constrain (3-) the residual polarization leakage after calibration to
be 0.3\%. We detect linear polarization from one of the two binary
components of our target source, IRAS\,16293-2422\,B. The derived polarization
position angles from our observations are in excellent agreement with those
detected from the previous observations of the SMA, implying that on the
spatial scale we are probing (50-1000 au), the physical mechanisms for
polarizing the continuum emission do not vary significantly over the wavelength
range of 0.88-7.5 mm. We hypothesize that the observed polarization
position angles trace the magnetic field which converges from large scale to an
approximately face-on rotating accretion flow. In this scenario, magnetic field
is predominantly poloidal on 100 au scales, and becomes toroidal on smaller
scales. However, this interpretation remains uncertain due to the high dust
optical depths at the central region of IRAS\,16293-2422\,B and the uncertain
temperature profile. We suggest that dust polarization at wavelengths
comparable or longer than 7\,mm may still trace interstellar magnetic field.
Future sensitive observations of dust polarization in the fully optically thin
regime will have paramount importance for unambiguously resolving the magnetic
field configuration.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures, accepted to A&A. Comments are welcom
ALMA resolves the spiraling accretion flow in the luminous OB cluster forming region G33.92+0.11
How rapidly collapsing parsec-scale massive molecular clumps feed high-mass
stars, and how they fragment to form OB clusters, have been outstanding
questions in the field of star-formation. In this work, we report the resolved
structures and kinematics of the approximately face-on, rotating massive
molecular clump, G33.92+0.11. Our high resolution Atacama Large
Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) images show that the spiral arm-like gas
overdensities form in the eccentric gas accretion streams. First, we resolved
that the dominant part of the 0.6 pc scale massive molecular clump
(3.010 ) G33.92+0.11 A is tangled with
several 0.5-1 pc size molecular arms spiraling around it, which may be
connected further to exterior gas accretion streams. Within G33.92+0.11 A, we
resolved the 0.1 pc width gas mini-arms connecting with the two central
massive (100-300 ) molecular cores. The kinematics of arms and cores
elucidate a coherent accretion flow continuing from large to small scales. We
demonstrate that the large molecular arms are indeed the cradles of dense
cores, which are likely current or future sites of high-mass star formation.
Since these deeply embedded massive molecular clumps preferentially form the
highest mass stars in the clusters, we argue that dense cores fed by or formed
within molecular arms play a key role in making the upper end of the stellar
and core mass functions.Comment: 20 pages, formally published by Ap
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