Waterfalls around protostars: Infall motions towards Class 0/I envelopes as probed by water
J.C. Mottram, E.F. van Dishoeck, M. Schmalzl, L.E. Kristensen, R., Visser, M.R. Hogerheijde, S. Bruderer

TL;DR
This study uses water line observations and radiative transfer modeling to investigate infall motions in protostellar envelopes, revealing that infall occurs over large scales and may be global or outside-in, with implications for star formation processes.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed constraints on infall velocities and scales in Class 0/I protostars using Herschel water observations and non-LTE radiative transfer models.
Findings
Infall occurs over entire envelopes in some protostars.
Infall velocities are often supersonic.
Large mass infall rates suggest potential disk instability.
Abstract
Abridged abstract: For stars to form, material must fall inwards from core scales through the envelope towards the central protostar. The velocity profile around protostars is poorly constrained. 6 Class 0 protostars and one Class I protostars observed with HIFI on board Herschel as part of the "Water in star-forming regions with Herschel" (WISH) survey show infall signatures in water line observations. We use 1-D non-LTE RATRAN radiative transfer models of the observed water lines to constrain the infall velocity and chemistry in the protostellar envelopes of these sources. We assume a free-fall velocity profile and, having found the best fit, vary the radii over which infall takes place. In the well-studied Class 0 protostar NGC1333-IRAS4A we find that infall takes place over the whole envelope to which our observations are sensitive (r>~1000 AU). For 4 sources infall takes place on…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Molecular Spectroscopy and Structure · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
