Spiral structures in an embedded protostellar disk driven by envelope accretion

被引:0
|
作者
Chin-Fei Lee
Zhi-Yun Li
Neal J. Turner
机构
[1] Academia Sinica Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics,Graduate Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics
[2] National Taiwan University,Astronomy Department
[3] University of Virginia,Jet Propulsion Laboratory
[4] California Institute of Technology,undefined
来源
Nature Astronomy | 2020年 / 4卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Hydrodynamical simulations show that a pair of spiral arms can form in the disk around a rapidly growing young star and that the arms are crucial in transporting angular momentum as the disk accretes material from the surrounding envelope1–4. Here we report the detection of a pair of symmetric spiral structures in a protostellar disk, supporting the formation of spiral arms in the disk around a forming star. The HH 111 VLA 1 source is a young Class I source embedded in a massive infalling protostellar envelope and is actively accreting, driving the prominent HH 111 jet. Previous observations showed a ring of shock emission around the disk’s outer edge5, indicating accretion of the envelope material onto the disk at a high rate. Now with ALMA observations of thermal emission from dust particles, we detect a pair of spiral arms extending from the inner region to the disk’s outer edge, similar to that seen in many simulations1–4. Additionally, the disk is massive, with a Toomre Q parameter near unity in the outer parts where the spiral structures are detected, supporting the notion that envelope accretion is making the outer disk gravitationally unstable. In our observations, another source, HH 111 VLA 2, is spatially resolved for the first time, showing a disk-like structure with a diameter of ~26 au and an orientation nearly orthogonal to that of the HH 111 VLA 1 disk.
引用
收藏
页码:142 / 146
页数:4
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Hot spiral structure in the accretion disk of the dwarf nova IP Pegasi
    Harlaftis, ET
    Steeghs, D
    Horne, K
    Martin, EL
    ACCRETION PROCESSES IN ASTROPHYSICAL SYSTEMS: SOME LIKE IT HOT!, 1998, (431): : 459 - 462
  • [42] The evolution of a binary in a retrograde circular orbit embedded in an accretion disk
    Ivanov, P. B.
    Papaloizou, J. C. B.
    Paardekooper, S. -J.
    Polnarev, A. G.
    ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS, 2015, 576
  • [43] Accretion disk winds driven by the disk radiation field under radiation drag
    Tajima, Y
    Fukue, J
    CENTRAL REGIONS OF THE GALAXY AND GALAXIES, 1998, : 415 - 416
  • [44] Kinematic analysis of spiral structures in the local disk
    Yano, T
    Chiba, M
    Gouda, N
    ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS, 2002, 389 (01) : 143 - 148
  • [45] The collective origin of spiral structures in disk galaxies
    D'Onghia, E.
    Vogelsberger, M.
    Hernquist, L.
    ASSEMBLING THE PUZZLE OF THE MILKY WAY, 2012, 19
  • [46] Spiral-wave-driven accretion in quiescent dwarf nov
    Van Den Bossche M.
    Lesur G.
    Dubus G.
    Astronomy and Astrophysics, 2023, 677
  • [47] Accretion-driven turbulence as universal process: galaxies, molecular clouds, and protostellar disks
    Klessen, R. S.
    Hennebelle, P.
    ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS, 2010, 520
  • [48] Anatomy of a fall: stationary and super-Keplerian spiral arms generated by accretion streamers in protostellar discs
    Calcino, Josh
    Price, Daniel J.
    Hilder, Thomas
    Christiaens, Valentin
    Speedie, Jessica
    Ormel, Chris W.
    MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY, 2025, 537 (03) : 2695 - 2707
  • [49] First Detection of a Linear Structure in the Midplane of the Young HH 211 Protostellar Disk: A Spiral Arm?
    Lee, Chin-Fei
    Jhan, Kai-Syun
    Moraghan, Anthony
    ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS, 2023, 951 (01)
  • [50] An Ordered Envelope-Disk Transition in the Massive Protostellar Source G339.88-1.26
    Zhang, Yichen
    Tan, Jonathan C.
    Sakai, Nami
    Tanaka, Kei E. I.
    De Buizer, James M.
    Liu, Mengyao
    Beltran, Maria T.
    Kratter, Kaitlin
    Mardones, Diego
    Garay, Guido
    ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 2019, 873 (01):