Disks around Massive Young Stellar Objects: Are They Common?

  • Jiang Z
  • Tamura M
  • Hoare M
  • et al.
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Abstract

We present K-band polarimetric images of several massive young stellar objects at resolutions $\sim$ 0.1-0.5 arcsec. The polarization vectors around these sources are nearly centro-symmetric, indicating they are dominating the illumination of each field. Three out of the four sources show elongated low-polarization structures passing through the centers, suggesting the presence of polarization disks. These structures and their surrounding reflection nebulae make up bipolar outflow/disk systems, supporting the collapse/accretion scenario as their low-mass siblings. In particular, S140 IRS1 show well defined outflow cavity walls and a polarization disk which matches the direction of previously observed equatorial disk wind, thus confirming the polarization disk is actually the circumstellar disk. To date, a dozen massive protostellar objects show evidence for the existence of disks; our work add additional samples around MYSOs equivalent to early B-type stars.

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Jiang, Z., Tamura, M., Hoare, M. G., Yao, Y., Ishii, M., Fang, M., & Yang, J. (2008). Disks around Massive Young Stellar Objects: Are They Common? The Astrophysical Journal, 673(2), L175–L179. https://doi.org/10.1086/528790

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