Abstract:The statistics of discovered exoplanets suggest that planets form efficiently. However, there are fundamental unsolved problems, such as excessive inward drift of particles in protoplanetary disks during planet formation. Recent theories invoke dust traps to overcome this problem. We report the detection of a dust trap in the disk around the star Oph IRS 48 using observations from the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA). The 0.44-millimeter-wavelength continuum map shows high-contrast crescent-shaped emission on one side of the star originating from millimeter-sized grains, whereas both the mid-infrared image (micrometer-sized dust) and the gas traced by the carbon monoxide 6-5 rotational line suggest rings centered on the star. The difference in distribution of big grains versus small grains/gas can be modeled with a vortex-shaped dust trap triggered by a companion.Main Text: While the ubiquity of planets is confirmed almost daily by detections of new exoplanets (1), the exact formation mechanism of planetary systems in disks of gas and dust around young stars remains a long-standing problem in astrophysics (2). In the standard coreaccretion picture, dust grains must grow from submicron sizes to ~10 M Earth rocky cores within the ~10 Myr lifetime of the circumstellar disk. However, this growth process is stymied by what is usually called the "radial drift and fragmentation barrier": Particles of intermediate size (~1 m at 1 AU, or ~1 mm at 50 AU from the star) acquire high drift velocities toward the star with respect to the gas (3,4). This leads to two major problems for further growth (5): First, highvelocity collisions between particles with different drift velocities cause fragmentation. Second, even if particles avoid this fragmentation, they will rapidly drift inward and thus be lost into the star before they have time to grow to planetesimal size. This radial drift barrier is one of the most persistent issues in planet formation theories. A possible solution is dust trapping in so-called pressure bumps: local pressure maxima where the dust piles up. One example of such a pressure bump is an anticyclonic vortex which can trap dust particles in the azimuthal direction (6-10).Using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), we report a highly asymmetric concentration of millimeter-sized dust grains on one side of the disk of the star Oph IRS 48 in the 0.44 millimeter (685 GHz) continuum emission (Fig. 1). We argue that this can be understood in the framework of dust trapping in a large anticyclonic vortex in the disk.The young A-type star Oph IRS 48 (distance ~ 120 pc, 1 pc =3.1·1013 km) has a well studied disk with a large inner cavity (deficit of dust in the inner disk region), a so-called transition disk. Mid-infrared imaging at 18.7 μm reveals a disk ring in the small dust grain (size ~50 μm) emission at an inclination of ~50°, peaking at 55 AU radius (1 AU = 1.5·10 8 km = distance from Earth to the Sun) or 0.46 arcseconds from the star (11). Spatially resolved obs...
Glycolaldehyde (HCOCH 2 OH) is the simplest sugar and an important intermediate in the path toward forming more complex biologically relevant molecules. In this paper we present the first detection of 13 transitions of glycolaldehyde around a solar-type young star, through Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA) observations of the Class 0 protostellar binary IRAS 16293-2422 at 220 GHz (6 transitions) and 690 GHz (7 transitions). The glycolaldehyde lines have their origin in warm (200-300 K) gas close to the individual components of the binary. Glycolaldehyde co-exists with its isomer, methyl formate (HCOOCH 3 ), which is a factor 10-15 more abundant toward the two sources. The data also show a tentative detection of ethylene glycol, the reduced alcohol of glycolaldehyde. In the 690 GHz data, the seven transitions predicted to have the highest optical depths based on modeling of the 220 GHz lines all show red-shifted absorption profiles toward one of the components in the binary (IRAS16293B) indicative of infall and emission at the systemic velocity offset from this by about 0.2 ′′ (25 AU). We discuss the constraints on the chemical formation of glycolaldehyde and other organic species -in particular, in the context of laboratory experiments of photochemistry of methanolcontaining ices. The relative abundances appear to be consistent with UV photochemistry of a CH 3 OH-CO mixed ice that has undergone mild heating. The order of magnitude increase in line density in these early ALMA data illustrate its huge potential to reveal the full chemical complexity associated with the formation of solar system analogs.
Context. The temperature and density structure of molecular cloud cores are the most important physical quantities that determine the course of the protostellar collapse and the properties of the stars they form. Nevertheless, density profiles often rely either on the simplifying assumption of isothermality or on observationally poorly constrained model temperature profiles. The instruments of the Herschel satellite provide us for the first time with both the spectral coverage and the spatial resolution that is needed to directly measure the dust temperature structure of nearby molecular cloud cores. Aims. With the aim of better constraining the initial physical conditions in molecular cloud cores at the onset of protostellar collapse, in particular of measuring their temperature structure, we initiated the guaranteed time key project (GTKP) "The Earliest Phases of Star Formation" (EPoS) with the Herschel satellite. This paper gives an overview of the low-mass sources in the EPoS project, the Herschel and complementary ground-based observations, our analysis method, and the initial results of the survey. Methods. We study the thermal dust emission of 12 previously well-characterized, isolated, nearby globules using FIR and submm continuum maps at up to eight wavelengths between 100 μm and 1.2 mm. Our sample contains both globules with starless cores and embedded protostars at different early evolutionary stages. The dust emission maps are used to extract spatially resolved SEDs, which are then fit independently with modified blackbody curves to obtain line-of-sight-averaged dust temperature and column density maps. Results. We find that the thermal structure of all globules (mean mass 7 M ) is dominated by external heating from the interstellar radiation field and moderate shielding by thin extended halos. All globules have warm outer envelopes (14-20 K) and colder dense interiors (8-12 K) with column densities of a few 10 22 cm −2 . The protostars embedded in some of the globules raise the local temperature of the dense cores only within radii out to about 5000 AU, but do not significantly affect the overall thermal balance of the globules. Five out of the six starless cores in the sample are gravitationally bound and approximately thermally stabilized. The starless core in CB 244 is found to be supercritical and is speculated to be on the verge of collapse. For the first time, we can now also include externally heated starless cores in the L smm /L bol vs. T bol diagram and find that T bol < 25 K seems to be a robust criterion to distinguish starless from protostellar cores, including those that only have an embedded very low-luminosity object.
A major goal of the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) is to make accurate images with resolutions of tens of milliarcseconds, which at submillimeter (submm) wavelengths requires baselines up to ∼15 km. To develop and test this capability, a Long Baseline Campaign (LBC) was carried out from 2014 September to late November, culminating in end-to-end observations, calibrations, and imaging of selected Science Verification (SV) targets. This paper presents an overview of the campaign and its main results, including an investigation of the short-term coherence properties and systematic phase errors over the long baselines at the ALMA site, a summary of the SV targets and observations, and recommendations for science observing strategies at long baselines. Deep ALMA images of the quasar 3C 138 at 97 and 241 GHz are also compared to VLA 43 GHz results, demonstrating an agreement at a level of a few percent. As a result of the extensive program of LBC testing, the highly successful SV imaging at long baselines achieved angular resolutions as fine as 19 mas at ∼350 GHz. Observing with ALMA on baselines of up to 15 km is now possible, and opens up new parameter space for submm astronomy.
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