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Published April 28, 2000 | public
Journal Article

Windows Through the Dusty Disks Surrounding the Youngest Low-Mass Protostellar Objects

Abstract

The formation and evolution of young low-mass stars are characterized by important processes of mass loss and accretion occurring in the innermost regions of their placentary circumstellar disks. Because of the large obscuration of these disks at optical and infrared wavelengths in the early protostellar stages (class 0 sources), they were previously detected only at radio wavelengths using interferometric techniques. We have detected with the Infrared Space Observatory the mid-infrared (mid-IR) emission associated with the class 0 protostar VLA1 in the HH1-HH2 region located in the Orion nebula. The emission arises in three wavelength windows (at 5.3, 6.6, and 7.5 micrometers) where the absorption due to ices and silicates has a local minimum that exposes the central part of the young protostellar system to mid-IR investigations. The mid-IR emission arises from a central source with a diameter of 4 astronomical units at an averaged temperature of ∼700 K, deeply embedded in a dense region with a visual extinction of 80 to 100 magnitudes.

Additional Information

© 2000 American Association for the Advancement of Science. 22 November 1999; accepted 21 March 2000. We thank Spanish Direcciόn General de Enseñanza Superior and Plan Nacional de Investigaciόn Espacial for support under grants PB96-0883 and PB98-1351E.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 18, 2023