Revealing H2D+ depletion and compact structure in starless and protostellar cores with ALMA
R. K. Friesen, J. Di Francesco, T. L. Bourke, P. Caselli, J. K., J{\o}rgensen, J. E. Pineda, M. Wong

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA observations to investigate the earliest stages of star formation in two cores, revealing small-scale structures, potential disks, and H2D+ depletion, providing insights into initial star and disk formation processes.
Contribution
It presents high-resolution ALMA data showing early star formation features, including potential disks and chemical depletion, advancing understanding of initial core evolution.
Findings
Detection of small-scale condensations with masses < 0.02 M_sun.
H2D+ detected only toward SM1N, offset from continuum peak.
Evidence suggesting early disk formation and chemical depletion in starless cores.
Abstract
We present Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) observations of the submillimeter dust continuum and H2D+ 1_{10}-1_{11} emission toward two evolved, potentially protostellar cores within the Ophiuchus molecular cloud, Oph A SM1 and SM1N. The data reveal small-scale condensations within both cores, with mass upper limits of M <~ 0.02M_Sun (~ 20 M_Jup). The SM1 condensation is consistent with a nearly-symmetric Gaussian source with a width of only 37 AU. The SM1N condensation is elongated, and extends 500 AU along its major axis. No evidence for substructure is seen in either source. A Jeans analysis indicates these sources are unlikely to fragment, suggesting that both will form single stars. H2D+ is only detected toward SM1N, offset from the continuum peak by ~150-200 AU. This offset may be due to either heating from an undetected, young, low luminosity protostellar…
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