The Origin of the Rotation Profiles in Star Forming Clouds
Sanemichi Z. Takahashi, Kengo Tomida, Masahiro N. Machida, Shu-ichiro, Inutsuka

TL;DR
This paper presents an analytic model explaining the observed rotation profiles in star-forming clouds, showing that flat angular momentum distributions result from flow dynamics rather than initial conditions, and enables protostar age estimation.
Contribution
It introduces a simple analytic model for gravitational collapse that accounts for observed rotation profiles, challenging previous assumptions about initial angular momentum distributions.
Findings
The model matches hydrodynamic simulations.
It explains flat $j$ profiles without uniform initial $j$.
It allows age estimation of protostars from rotation data.
Abstract
Angular momentum distribution and its redistribution are of crucial importance in formation and evolution of circumstellar disks. Many molecular line observations toward young stellar objects indicate that radial distributions of the specific angular momentum are more or less universal. In small scales, typically 100 AU, the specific angular momenta distribute like , indicating existence of rotationally supported disk. In outer regions, 5000 AU, increases as the radius increases and the slope is steeper than unity, which is supposed to reflect the original angular momentum distributions in the maternal molecular clouds. And lastly there is a connecting region, 100 AU 5000 AU, in which -distribution looks almost flat. While this is often interpreted as a consequence of conservation of the specific angular momentum,…
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