A&A 375, 455-468 (2001)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20010868
The spectral energy distribution of self-gravitating protostellar disks
G. Lodato1 and G. Bertin1, 21 Scuola Normale Superiore, Piazza dei Cavalieri 7, 56126 Pisa, Italy
2 Università degli Studi di Milano, Dipartimento di Fisica, Via Celoria 16, 20133 Milano, Italy
(Received 12 February 2001 / Accepted 12 June 2001)
Abstract
The long wavelength emission of protostellar objects is commonly attributed to a
disk of gas and dust around the central protostar. In the first stages of disk
accretion or in the case of high mass protostars, the disk mass is likely to be
sufficiently large, so that the disk self-gravity may have an impact on the dynamics
and the emission properties of the disk. In this paper we describe the spectral
energy distribution (SED) produced by a simple, non-flaring, self-gravitating
accretion disk model. Self-gravity is included in the calculation of the rotation
curve of the disk and in the energy balance equation, as a term of effective heating
related to Jeans instability. In order to quantify in detail the requirements on the
mass of the disk and on the accretion rate posed on the models by realistic
situations, we compare the SEDs produced by these models with the observed SEDs of a
small sample of well-studied protostellar objects. We find that relatively modest
disks -even lighter than the central star -can lead to an interesting fit to the
infrared SED of the FU Orionis objects considered, while in the case of T Tauri
stars the required parameters fall outside the range suggested as acceptable by the
general theoretical and observational scenario. On the basis of the present results,
we may conclude that the contribution of a self-gravitating disk is plausible in
several cases (in particular, for FU Orionis objects) and that, in the standard
irradiation, dominated disk scenario, it would help soften the requirements
encountered by Keplerian accretion models.
Key words: accretion, accretion disks -- gravitation -- stars: pre-main sequence
Offprint request: G. Lodato, lodato@cibs.sns.it
SIMBAD Objects
© ESO 2001

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