A large, massive, rotating disk around an isolated young stellar object
Sascha P. Quanz (ETH Zurich), Henrik Beuther (MPIA), Juergen, Steinacker (LERMA Paris / MPIA), Hendrik Linz (MPIA), Stephan M. Birkmann, (ESTEC), Oliver Krause (MPIA), Thomas Henning (MPIA), Qizhou Zhang (CfA)

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and detailed multi-wavelength analysis of one of the largest known massive, rotating circumstellar disks around an isolated young stellar object, revealing its structure, size, and associated outflows.
Contribution
It provides the first high-resolution imaging and modeling of a massive, large-scale rotating disk around an isolated young star, combining NIR, IR, and millimeter data.
Findings
The disk size is approximately 10,500 AU, possibly smaller due to shadowing.
Detected a molecular outflow aligned with the disk's rotation axis.
Estimated disk mass to be up to a few solar masses.
Abstract
We present multi-wavelengths observations and a radiative transfer model of a newly discovered massive circumstellar disk of gas and dust which is one of the largest disks known today. Seen almost edge-on, the disk is resolved in high-resolution near-infrared (NIR) images and appears as a dark lane of high opacity intersecting a bipolar reflection nebula. Based on molecular line observations we estimate the distance to the object to be 3.5 kpc. This leads to a size for the dark lane of ~10500 AU but due to shadowing effects the true disk size could be smaller. In Spitzer/IRAC 3.6 micron images the elongated shape of the bipolar reflection nebula is still preserved and the bulk of the flux seems to come from disk regions that can be detected due to the slight inclination of the disk. At longer IRAC wavelengths, the flux is mainly coming from the central regions penetrating directly…
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