Kinematics of the inner thousand AU region around the young massive star AFGL 2591-VLA3: a massive disk candidate?
K.-S. Wang, F. F. S. van der Tak, and M. R. Hogerheijde

TL;DR
This study investigates the gas kinematics around the young massive star AFGL 2591-VLA3 using millimeter interferometry, revealing a sub-Keplerian rotating disk with expansion likely driven by stellar wind, supporting the accretion model of massive star formation.
Contribution
It provides detailed kinematic analysis of a massive star's disk candidate, highlighting peculiar sub-Keplerian rotation and expansion, which advances understanding of massive star formation processes.
Findings
Detected linear velocity gradients indicating rotation and expansion.
Identified layered molecular emission suggesting disk stratification.
Proposed magnetic braking and stellar wind as drivers of disk kinematics.
Abstract
[Context] Recent detections of disks around young high-mass stars support the idea of massive star formation through accretion rather than coalescence, but the detailed kinematics in the equatorial region of the disk candidates is not well known, which limits our understanding of the accretion process. [Aims] This paper explores the kinematics of the gas around a young massive star with millimeter-wave interferometry to improve our understanding of the formation of massive stars though accretion. [Methods] We use Plateau de Bure interferometric images to probe the environment of the nearby (~1 kpc) and luminous (~20000 Lsun) high-mass (10-16 Msun) young star AFGL 2591-VLA3 in continuum and in lines of HDO, H218O and SO2 in the 115 and 230 GHz bands. Radiative transfer calculations are employed to investigate the kinematics of the source. [Results] At ~0.5" (500 AU) resolution, the line…
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