A low-mass protostar's disk-envelope interface: disk-shadowing evidence from ALMA DCO+ observations of VLA1623
Nadia M. Murillo (1, 2), Simon Bruderer (1), Ewine F. van Dishoeck, (1, 3), Catherine Walsh (3), Daniel Harsono (3, 4), Shih-Ping Lai (2, and 5), Christian M. Fuchs (6) ((1) Max Planck Institute for, extraterrestrial physics, Garching, Germany, (2) Institute of Astronomy and

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA observations of VLA1623A to reveal that the disk-shadowing effect influences the temperature and chemical structure at the disk-envelope interface, with DCO+ serving as an effective cold temperature tracer.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of the disk-envelope interface in a Class 0 protostar, highlighting the impact of disk-shadowing on envelope chemistry and temperature structure.
Findings
DCO+ traces a cold ring at the disk-envelope interface.
Disk-shadowing causes a temperature drop outside the disk on >200AU scales.
DCO+ is confirmed as an excellent tracer of cold gas in protostellar environments.
Abstract
Due to instrumental limitations and a lack of disk detections, the structure between the envelope and the rotationally supported disk has been poorly studied. This is now possible with ALMA through observations of CO isotopologs and tracers of freezeout. Class 0 sources are ideal for such studies given their almost intact envelope and young disk. The structure of the disk-envelope interface of the prototypical Class 0 source, VLA1623A which has a confirmed Keplerian disk, is constrained from ALMA observations of DCO+ 3-2 and C18O 2-1. The physical structure of VLA1623 is obtained from the large-scale SED and continuum radiative transfer. An analytic model using a simple network coupled with radial density and temperature profiles is used as input for a 2D line radiative transfer calculation for comparison with the ALMA Cycle 0 12m array and Cycle 2 ACA observations of VLA1623. DCO+…
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