Pebbles in an Embedded Protostellar Disk: The Case of CB26
Chuan-Peng Zhang, Ralf Launhardt, Yao Liu, John J. Tobin, Thomas, Henning

TL;DR
This study reveals that large dust grains, including pebbles and possibly larger bodies, form rapidly within the first million years of a protostellar disk's evolution, suggesting early planet formation processes.
Contribution
First detailed modeling of grain growth in a protostellar disk showing formation of pebbles and larger particles during the protostellar phase.
Findings
Dust grains have grown to ~10 cm in size in the disk.
Presence of larger particles suggested by residual 8.1 mm emission.
Large solids are present early, within 1 million years.
Abstract
Planetary cores are thought to form in proto-planetary disks via the growth of dusty solid material. However, it is unclear how early this process begins. We study the physical structure and grain growth in the edge-on disk that surrounds the ~1 Myr old low-mass (~0.55 Msun) protostar embedded in the Bok Globule CB26 to examine how much grain growth has already occurred in the protostellar phase. We combine the SED between 0.9 m and 6.4 cm with high angular resolution continuum maps at 1.3, 2.9, and 8.1 mm, and use the radiative transfer code RADMC-3D to conduct a detailed modelling of the dust emission from the disk and envelope of CB 26. We infer inner and outer disk radii of around 16 au and 17222 au, respectively. The total gas mass in the disk is ~0.076 Msun, which amounts to ~14% of the mass of the central star. The inner disk contains a compact free-free emission…
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