A 0.2 solar mass protostar with a Keplerian disk in the very young L1527 IRS system
John J. Tobin, Lee Hartmann, Hsin-Fang Chiang, David J. Wilner, Leslie, W. Looney, Laurent Loinard, Nuria Calvet, Paola D'Alessio

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a very young, low-mass protostar with a Keplerian disk, providing insights into early star formation and disk development in the L1527 IRS system.
Contribution
It presents detailed observations confirming a Keplerian disk around a 0.2 solar mass protostar, the lowest protostar/envelope mass ratio observed to date.
Findings
Protostar mass of 0.19 solar masses
Protostar/envelope mass ratio of ~0.2
Estimated age of ~300,000 years
Abstract
In their earliest stages, protostars accrete mass from their surrounding envelopes through circumstellar disks. Until now, the smallest observed protostar/envelope mass ratio was ~2.1. The protostar L1527 IRS is thought to be in the earliest stages of star formation. Its envelope contains ~1 solar mass of material within a ~0.05 pc radius, and earlier observations suggested the presence of an edge-on disk. Here we report observations of dust continuum emission and 13CO (J=2-1) line emission from the disk around L1527, from which we determine a protostellar mass of M = 0.19 +/- 0.04 solar masses and a protostar/envelope mass ratio of ~0.2. We conclude that most of the luminosity is generated through the accretion process, with an accretion rate of ~6.6 x 10^-7 solar masses per year. If it has been accreting at that rate through much of its life, its age is ~300,000 yr, though theory…
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