The Ionized Warped Disk and Disk Wind of the Massive Protostar Monoceros R2-IRS2 Seen with ALMA

Theories of massive star formation predict that massive protostars accrete gas through circumstellar disks. Although several cases have been found already thanks to high angular-resolution interferometry, the internal physical structure of these disks remains unknown, in particular whether they pres...

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Veröffentlicht in:Astrophysical journal. Letters 2020-07, Vol.897 (2), p.L33
Hauptverfasser: Jiménez-Serra, Izaskun, Báez-Rubio, Alejandro, Martín-Pintado, Jesús, Zhang, Qizhou, Rivilla, Víctor M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Theories of massive star formation predict that massive protostars accrete gas through circumstellar disks. Although several cases have been found already thanks to high angular-resolution interferometry, the internal physical structure of these disks remains unknown, in particular whether they present warps or internal holes, as observed in low-mass protoplanetary disks. Here, we report very high angular-resolution observations of the H21 radio recombination line carried out in Band 9 with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (beam of 80 mas × 60 mas, or 70 au × 50 au) toward the IRS2 massive young stellar object in the Monoceros R2 star-forming cluster. The H21 line shows maser amplification, which allows us to study the kinematics and physical structure of the ionized gas around the massive protostar down to spatial scales of ∼1-2 au. Our ALMA images and 3D radiative transfer modeling reveal that the ionized gas around IRS2 is distributed in a Keplerian circumstellar disk and an expanding wind. The H21 emission centroids at velocities between −10 and 20 km s−1 deviate from the disk plane, suggesting a warping for the disk. This could be explained by the presence of a secondary object (a stellar companion or a massive planet) within the system. The ionized wind seems to be launched from the disk surface at distances ∼11 au from the central star, consistent with magnetically-regulated disk wind models. This suggests a similar wind-launching mechanism to that recently found for evolved massive stars such as MWC349A and MWC922.
ISSN:2041-8205
2041-8213
DOI:10.3847/2041-8213/aba050