G11.92-0.61 MM 1: A fragmented Keplerian disk surrounding a proto-O star

Abstract

We present high resolution (300 au) Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) observations of the massive young stellar object G11.92-0.61 MM 1. We resolve the immediate circumstellar environment of MM 1 in 1.3 mm continuum emission and CH3CN emission for the first time. The object divides into two main sources - MM 1a, which is the source of a bipolar molecular outflow, and MM 1b, located 0.57'' (1920 au) to the South-East. The main component of MM 1a is an elongated continuum structure, perpendicular to the bipolar outflow, with a size of 0.141'' × 0.050'' (480×170 au). The gas kinematics toward MM 1a probed via CH3CN trace a variety of scales. The lower energy J=12-11 K=3 line traces extended, rotating gas within the outflow cavity, while the v8=1 line shows a clearly-resolved Keplerian rotation signature. Analysis of the gas kinematics and dust emission shows that the total enclosed mass in MM 1a is 405 M (where between 2.2-5.8 M is attributed to the disk), while MM 1b is <0.6 M. The extreme mass ratio and orbital properties of MM 1a and MM 1b suggest that MM 1b is one of the first observed examples of the formation of a binary star via disk fragmentation around a massive young (proto)star.

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