Japan Geoscience Union Meeting 2021

Presentation information

[J] Oral

P (Space and Planetary Sciences ) » P-CG Complex & General

[P-CG19] Origin and evolution of materials in space

Fri. Jun 4, 2021 10:45 AM - 12:15 PM Ch.04 (Zoom Room 04)

convener:Aki Takigawa(Department of Earth and Planetary Science, The University of Tokyo), Hitoshi Miura(Graduate School of Science, Department of Information and Basic Science, Nagoya City University), Takafumi Ootsubo(National Astronomical Observatory of Japan, National Institutes of Natural Sciences), Hideko Nomura(Division of Science, National Astronomical Observatory of Japan), Chairperson:Sota ARAKAWA(National Astronomical Observatory of Japan), Daiki Yamamoto(Institute of Space and Astronautical Science, Japan Aerospace eXploration Agency)

12:00 PM - 12:15 PM

[PCG19-06] Hot Salty Disks around Massive Protostars: A New Connection from Star-Formation Observation to Meteoritics?

★Invited Papers

*Kei Tanaka1,2 (1.University of Colorado Boulder, 2.National Astronomical Observatory of Japan)

Keywords:star formation, ALMA observations, refractory species

Massive stars (>10 solar mass, >10,000 solar luminosity) play significant roles in controlling the dynamical and chemical evolution of the interstellar medium in galaxies by intense radiation, stellar winds, and supernovae. Even at the formation stage, the radiation of massive protostars is already powerful, heating the surrounding gas (>1000 au) to over 100 K and producing a variety of chemical species, including complex organic molecules. Such regions/phases of massive protostars, so-called the “hot cores,” have been studied as an important test bed of astrochemistry. Using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), we conduct high-resolution observations toward the massive proto-binary system IRAS 16547-4247, and investigate the innermost structures down to the scale of 100 au. We detect emission lines of sodium chloride (NaCl), silicon compounds (SiO, SiS), and vibrationally-excited water (H2O v2=1) associated with the twin protostellar disks (Tanaka et al. 2020, ApJL; see the figure). Gaseous refractory molecules are rarely found in star-forming regions, and this is the second detection of salt in protostellar systems. These newly-detected molecular lines exclusively probe the individual disks at the innermost region of 100 au, while typical hot-core molecules trace the envelope of the 1000 au scale (e.g., complex organic molecules). The presence of the gaseous refractory species, which are products of dust destruction, and the highly-excited water vapor with Eu/k > 3000 K indicates the hot and dynamic nature of massive protostellar disks. The “hot disk” is the new key to understanding massive star formation, and also has excellent potential for future research on metallic elements in star-forming regions. In particular, we expect that the observations of hot-disk lines will provide new insights into the origin of the oldest meteoritic inclusions, i.e., CAIs and chondrules, in the proto-solar nebula.