No Keplerian Disk >10 AU around the Protostar B335: Magnetic Braking or Young Age?
Hsi-Wei Yen, Shigehisa Takakuwa, Patrick M. Koch, Yusuke Aso, Shin, Koyamatsu, Ruben Krasnopolsky, and Nagayoshi Ohashi

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA observations to investigate the small Keplerian disk around the protostar B335, suggesting magnetic braking or youth as possible reasons for its limited size, and providing detailed kinematic analysis.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed kinematic analysis of B335's inner region, estimating the disk size, protostellar mass, and exploring the causes of its small disk size compared to other protostars.
Findings
The Keplerian disk radius in B335 is estimated to be 1-3 AU.
The protostellar mass is approximately 0.05 solar masses.
The observed angular momentum suggests magnetic braking or youth as explanations.
Abstract
We have conducted ALMA cycle 2 observations in the 1.3 mm continuum and in the C18O (2-1) and SO (5_6-4_5) lines at a resolution of ~0.3" toward the Class 0 protostar B335. The 1.3 mm continuum, C18O, and SO emission all show central compact components with sizes of ~40-180 AU within more extended components. The C18O component shows signs of infalling and rotational motion. By fitting simple kinematic models to the C18O data, the protostellar mass is estimated to be 0.05 Msun. The specific angular momentum, on a 100 AU scale, is ~4.3E-5 km/s*pc. A similar specific angular momentum, ~3E-5 to 5E-5 km/s*pc, is measured on a 10 AU scale from the velocity gradient observed in the central SO component, and there is no clear sign of an infalling motion in the SO emission. By comparing the infalling and rotational motion, our ALMA results suggest that the observed rotational motion has not yet…
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