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The first bird's-eye view of a gravitationally unstable accretion disk in high-mass star formation

Published 30 May 2019 in astro-ph.SR and astro-ph.GA | (1905.12983v1)

Abstract: We report on the first bird's-eye view of the innermost accretion disk around the high-mass protostellar object G353.273+0.641, taken by Atacama Large Millimter/submillimeter Array long-baselines. The disk traced by dust continuum emission has a radius of 250 au, surrounded by the infalling rotating envelope traced by thermal CH$3$OH lines. This disk radius is consistent with the centrifugal radius estimated from the specific angular momentum in the envelope. The lower-limit envelope mass is $\sim$5-7 M${\odot}$ and accretion rate onto the stellar surface is 3 $\times$ 10${-3}$ M${\odot}$ yr${-1}$ or higher. The expected stellar age is well younger than 10${4}$ yr, indicating that the host object is one of the youngest high-mass objects at present. The disk mass is 2-7 M${\odot}$, depending on the dust opacity index. The estimated Toomre's $Q$ parameter is typically 1-2 and can reach 0.4 at the minimum. These $Q$ values clearly satisfy the classical criteria for the gravitational instability, and are consistent with the recent numerical studies. Observed asymmetric and clumpy structures could trace a spiral arm and/or disk fragmentation. We found that 70$\%$ of the angular momentum in the accretion flow could be removed via the gravitational torque in the disk. Our study has indicated that the dynamical nature of a self-gravitating disk could dominate the early phase of high-mass star formation. This is remarkably consistent with the early evolutionary scenario of a low-mass protostar.

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