A deeply embedded young protoplanetary disk around L1489 IRS observed by the submillimeter array
C. Brinch, A. Crapsi, J. K. Jorgensen, M. R. Hogerheijde, T. Hill

TL;DR
This study uses submillimeter observations to identify and model a very young, embedded protoplanetary disk around L1489 IRS, revealing a misaligned disk and envelope likely caused by turbulence or binarity.
Contribution
First detection and detailed modeling of a deeply embedded, young protoplanetary disk with a significant angular momentum misalignment around L1489 IRS.
Findings
Disk is inclined at 40°, different from the envelope's 74°
Data consistent with collapsing envelope and Keplerian disk models
Misalignment may be due to turbulence or binarity
Abstract
Circumstellar disks are expected to form early in the process that leads to the formation of a young star, during the collapse of the dense molecular cloud core. It is currently not well understood at what stage of the collapse the disk is formed or how it subsequently evolves. We aim to identify whether an embedded Keplerian protoplanetary disk resides in the L1489 IRS system. Given the amount of envelope material still present, such a disk would respresent a very young example of a protoplanetary disk. Using the Submillimeter Array (SMA) we have observed the HCO 3--2 line with a resolution of about 1. At this resolution a protoplanetary disk with a radius of a few hundred AUs should be detectable, if present. Radiative transfer tools are used to model the emission from both continuum and line data. We find that these data are consistent with theoretical models of a…
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