A Candidate Detection of the First Hydrostatic Core

Access full-text files

Date

2010-10

Authors

Enoch, Melissa L.
Lee, Jeong-Eun
Harvey, Paul
Dunham, Michael M.
Schnee, Scott

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Abstract

The first hydrostatic core (FHSC) represents a very early phase in the low-mass star Formation process, after collapse of the parent core has begun but before a true protostar has formed. This large (few AU), cool (100 K), pressure-supported core of molecular hydrogen is expected from theory, but has yet to be observationally verified. Here, we present observations of an excellent candidate for the FHSC phase: Per-Bolo 58, a dense core in Perseus that was previously believed to be starless. The 70 mu m flux of 65 mJy, from new deep Spitzer MIPS observations, is consistent with that expected for the FHSC. A low signal-to-noise detection at 24 mu m leaves open the possibility that Per-Bolo 58 could be a very low luminosity protostar, however. We utilize radiative transfer models to determine the best-fitting FHSC and protostar models to the spectral energy distribution and 2.9 mm visibilities of Per-Bolo 58. The source is consistent with an FHSC with some source of lower opacity through the envelope allowing 24 mu m emission to escape; a small outflow cavity and a cavity in the envelope are both possible. While we are unable to rule out the presence of a protostar, if present it would be one of the lowest luminosity protostellar objects yet observed, with an internal luminosity of similar to 0.01 L(circle dot).

Department

Description

LCSH Subject Headings

Citation

Enoch, Melissa L., Jeong-Eun Lee, Paul Harvey, Michael M. Dunham, and Scott Schnee. "A Candidate Detection of the First Hydrostatic Core." The Astrophysical Journal Letters, Vol. 722, No. 1 (Oct., 2010): L33.