IRAS 16293-2422: Evidence for Infall onto a Counter-Rotating Protostellar Accretion Disk


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We report high spatial resolution VLA observations of the low-mass star-forming region IRAS 16293-2422 using four molecular probes: ethyl cyanide (CH$_3$CH$_2$CN), methyl formate (CH$_3$OCHO), formic acid (HCOOH), and the ground vibrational state of silicon monoxide (SiO). Ethyl cyanide emiss ion has a spatial scale of $sim20$ and encompasses binary cores A and B as determined by continuum emission peaks. Surrounded by formic acid emission, methyl formate emission has a spatial scale of $sim6$and is confined to core B. SiO emission shows two velocity components with spatial scales less than 2$$ that map $sim2$ northeast of the A and B symmetry axis. The redshifted SiO is $sim2$ northwest of blueshifted SiO along a position angle of $sim135^o$ which is approximately parallel to the A and B symmetry axis. We interpret the spatial position offset in red and blueshifted SiO emission as due to rotation of a protostellar accretion disk and we derive $sim$1.4 M$_{odot}$ interior to the SiO emission. In the same vicinity, Mundy et al. (1986) also concluded rotation of a nearly edge-on disk from OVRO observations of much stronger and ubiquitous $^{13}$CO emission but the direction of rotation is opposite to the SiO emission findings. Taken together, SiO and $^{13}$CO data suggest evidence for a counter-rotating disk. Moreover, archival BIMA array $^{12}$CO data show an inverse P Cygni profile with the strongest absorption in close proximity to the SiO emission, indicating unambiguous material infall toward the counter-rotating protostellar disk at a new source location within the IRAS 16293-2422 complex. The details of these observations and our interpretations are discussed.

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