Water vapor in the inner 25 au of a young disk around a low-mass protostar

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Abstract

Water is one of the key molecules in the physical and chemical evolution of star- and planet-forming regions. We here report the first spatially resolved observation of thermal emission of (an isotopologue of) water with the Plateau de Bure Interferometer toward the deeply embedded Class 0 protostar NGC 1333-IRAS4B. The observations of the H182O 3 1,3-22,0 transition at 203.4 GHz resolve the emission of water toward this source with an extent of about 02 corresponding to the inner 25 AU (radius). The H182O emission reveals a tentative velocity gradient perpendicular to the extent of the protostellar outflow/jet probed by observations of CO rotational transitions and water masers. The line is narrow, ≈ 1kms-1 (FWHM), significantly less than what would be expected for emission from an infalling envelope or accretion shock, but consistent with emission from a disk seen at a low inclination angle. The water column density inferred from these data suggests that the water emitting gas is a thin warm layer containing about 25 M Earth of material, 0.03% of the total disk mass traced by continuum observations. © 2010. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

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Jørgensen, J. K., & Van Dishoeck, E. F. (2010). Water vapor in the inner 25 au of a young disk around a low-mass protostar. Astrophysical Journal Letters, 710(1 PART 2). https://doi.org/10.1088/2041-8205/710/1/L72

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