HOTDISK. Finding Massive Protostellar Disks with Water and Refractory Molecular Species
Kai Yang, Yichen Zhang, Kei E. I. Tanaka, Tie Liu, Nami Sakai + 14 more
TLDR
The HOTDISK project uses ALMA to identify massive protostellar disks via vibrationally excited water, NaCl, and SiS, revealing their common presence.
Key contributions
- ALMA observations detected vibrationally excited water in 7/10 massive protostars, showing disk rotation.
- NaCl and SiS emission was found in 5/7 sources, further supporting compact rotating disk structures.
- Established vibrationally excited water, NaCl, and SiS as powerful ~100 au disk tracers.
- High detection rate suggests compact rotating disks are common in massive star-forming regions.
Why it matters
This research significantly advances our ability to detect and study massive protostellar disks, which are crucial for understanding massive star formation. By identifying new chemical tracers, it opens new avenues for observing these elusive structures.
Original Abstract
We present high-angular-resolution ($\sim0.05^{\prime\prime}$) ALMA Band~6 observations from the HOTDISK project (Hot-Origin Tracer survey of DISKs of massive protostars) aimed at investigating the "hot-disk" chemical pattern traced by vibrationally excited water, NaCl, SiS, and SiO in the innermost regions around massive protostars. Ten targets were selected based on strong CH$_3$CN emission exhibiting clear rotational signatures and centrally concentrated SiO emission from lower-resolution observations. We detect vibrationally excited water emission toward 7 of the 10 sources. In all detections, the blueshifted and redshifted components are compact and located on opposite sides of the 1.3 mm continuum peak, with velocity gradients approximately perpendicular to the outflow axes, consistent with rotation on disk scales. Emission from NaCl and SiS is detected toward 5 of these 7 sources and exhibits similar kinematics, further supporting the presence of compact rotating structures. In contrast, commonly used hot-core tracers (e.g., CH$_3$CN and SO$_2$) primarily probe larger-scale envelope gas. These results demonstrate that vibrationally excited water, NaCl, and SiS are powerful tracers of disk structures on $\sim$100 au scales, when observed at sufficient angular resolution and sensitivity. The high detection rate suggests that hot-disk chemical patterns - and thus compact rotating disks - are common in massive star-forming regions, at least among sources with well-developed rotating envelopes.
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