A Triple Protostar System Formed via Fragmentation of a Gravitationally Unstable Disk
John Tobin (Oklahoma/Leiden), Kaitlin Kratter (Arizona), Magnus, Persson (Onsala), Leslie Looney (Illinois), Michael Dunham (SUNY-Fredonia),, Dominique Segura-Cox (Illinois), Zhi-Yun Li (Virginia), Claire Chandler, (NRAO), Sarah Sadavoy (MPIA), Robert Harris (Illinois)

TL;DR
This paper presents observational evidence of a triple protostar system formed through disk fragmentation caused by gravitational instability in a young star-forming disk, supporting theories of multiple star formation.
Contribution
It provides the first direct observational evidence of disk fragmentation leading to multiple star formation in a very young protostellar system.
Findings
Disk around L1448 IRS3B shows spiral structure indicative of gravitational instability.
A tertiary protostar is located within a spiral arm, consistent with recent disk fragmentation.
The system's properties align with models of disk fragmentation producing multiple stars.
Abstract
Binary and multiple star systems are a frequent outcome of the star formation process, and as a result, almost half of all sun-like stars have at least one companion star. Theoretical studies indicate that there are two main pathways that can operate concurrently to form binary/multiple star systems: large scale fragmentation of turbulent gas cores and filaments or smaller scale fragmentation of a massive protostellar disk due to gravitational instability. Observational evidence for turbulent fragmentation on scales of 1000~AU has recently emerged. Previous evidence for disk fragmentation was limited to inferences based on the separations of more-evolved pre-main sequence and protostellar multiple systems. The triple protostar system L1448 IRS3B is an ideal candidate to search for evidence of disk fragmentation. L1448 IRS3B is in an early phase of the star formation process, likely…
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