The contribution of disks and envelopes to the millimeter continuum emission from very young low-mass stars
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 1993 papers
Abstract
We investigate the question of disk formation during the protostar phase. We model the dust continuum emission from the dense cloud core using the cloud-collapse models of Terebey et al. (1984) and show that dust emission from the dense core is important when measured with large single-dish telescopes at 1.3 mm, but nearly negligible with interferometers at 2.7 mm. From published and new data, we conclude that massive disks are also seen toward a number of other sources including L1448 IRS 3, whose disk mass is estimated to be 0.5 solar mass. However, 1.3 mm data show that massive disks are relatively rare, occurring around perhaps 5 percent of young embedded stars. This implies that either massive disks occur briefly during the embedded phase or that relatively few young stars form massive disks. The median 1.3 mm flux density of IRAS-Dense cores in our sample is nearly the same as T Tauri stars in the sample of Beckwith et al. (1990). We conclude that the typical disk mass is not significantly higher during the embedded phase than during the later T Tauri phase.
Related Papers
- → Infrared imaging of high-mass young stellar objects: evidence of multiple shocks and of a new protostar/star eclipsing system(2019)5 cited
- → The Quest for X-Rays from Protostars(1998)3 cited
- → The Quest for X-Rays from Protostars(1998)1 cited
- → The Nobeyama Millimeter Array Survey for Protoplanetary Disks Around Protostar Candidates and T Tauri Stars in Taurus(1994)
- → New Sample of Young Stellar Objects(1991)