Released: April 15, 2026, Academia Sinica Institute of Astronomy & Astrophysics (ASIAA), Taiwan
An international team led by Dr. Indrani Das of Academia Sinica Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics (ASIAA), has unveiled, for the first time, how infalling gas from star-forming cores gradually transitions into planet-forming disks. Their findings, combining numerical simulations with Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) observations, is published today in the Astrophysical Journal.
Protoplanetary disks form around young stars when dense molecular cloud cores collapse under their own gravity. An outer shroud of gas and dust, known as the envelope, surrounds and feeds both the young star and the forming disk. While it is well understood that planets eventually form within these disks and follow Keplerian orbits, the mechanism that transforms rapid infalling gas motion from the envelope into ordered Keplerian motion within the disk has remained a mystery for decades.
Based on both theoretical and observational evidence, a recent study led by Dr. Indrani Das, a postdoctoral research fellow of ASIAA, has discovered, for the first time, that there exists a distinct transition zone at the envelope-disk interface of a young star-disk system, which Das named ENDTRANZ (Envelope Disk Transition Zone). Their findings have established that infalling gas motions gradually transition into Keplerian motions across this transition zone. Crucially, this transition is far from abrupt and contradicts earlier infall models that are based on classical test-particle dynamics.
“The existence of ENDTRANZ naturally results from the redistribution of mass and angular momentum during the formation of disks around young stars. This process ultimately governs how infalling material from the envelope, which rotates more slowly than the Keplerian speed, spreads out to form the disk and gradually settles into ordered Keplerian rotation”, explained Das, emphasizing that the discovery of ENDTRANZ is a major step forward in understanding how stars and planetary systems—including our own Solar System—form.
To determine the physics of ENDTRANZ, the team first ran the numerical simulations using FEOSAD, a code that models the star-disk system starting from the collapse of a starless cloud core. Their results showed that the transition from the infalling-rotating envelope to the spinning disk gradually unfolds through a “jump” across a finite thickness in the radial profile of specific angular momentum, which they identified as a novel signature of ENDTRANZ.
Specific angular momentum is defined as the total angular momentum per unit mass, describing how fast and how far out a mass parcel orbits regardless of its mass. Thus it serves as a powerful tool for understanding how material rotating at different rates reorganizes during the evolution from collapsing gas clouds to disks. This systematic reorganization is analogous to atmospheric convection, where circulation occurs in an organized way, with warm air rising and cool air descending while exchanging heat.
“This ENDTRANZ tracer, in the form of a jump in the specific angular momentum profile, essentially manifests from the gradual transition in the rotational velocity. This change in rotational behavior offers a diagnostic framework for understanding the physical processes at play that drive the disk evolution,” said Basu, a co-author of this study.
The team also studied L1527 IRS, a young star located about 450 light-years from Earth in the Taurus molecular cloud, which hosts a disk with a radius of approximately 70 astronomical units. Using the high-resolution ALMA Large Program eDisk (Embedded Disks in Planet Formation) observations, the researchers for the first time, identified a similar jump in the radial profile of the specific angular momentum at the envelope-disk transition of L1527 IRS. Spanning a radial width of about 16 astronomical units, this observed jump confirmed the existence of a transition zone.
“At first, I did not believe that the observational data of L1527 IRS showed evidence of ENDTRANZ, but surprisingly, it was there! A careful inspection and comparison of the radial dependence of specific angular momentum between the observational data and the simulation helped identify the evidence of ENDTRANZ in L1527 IRS,” said Ohashi, the principal investigator of the ALMA eDisk large program and another co-author of this study.
“Interestingly enough, model ENDTRANZ exhibits significant local variations in kinematics around the disk circumference and, when combined with observations, can offer insights into the complex spiral structure of a protoplanetary disk,” commented Vorobyov, another co-author of the study.
This pioneering work establishes ENDTRANZ as a new frontier in star and planet formation studies, opening the door to deeper exploration of its complex physics and to searching for its signatures in other young stellar systems. In many ways, the team believes this is just the beginning!
A conceptual visualization of ENDTRANZ, the transition zone at the envelope–disk boundary, which is shown as a red colored, belt-like annulus where the gas motion gradually transitions from the infalling envelope to the Keplerian rotation within the protoplanetary disk surrounding a young star. This is an AI-generated illustration based on a two-dimensional spatial map of the specific angular momentum in the equatorial plane, as obtained from Das's numerical simulations. The specific angular momentum map offers an intuitive lens to ‘see’ ENDTRANZ, making its dynamics more apparent than in the rotational velocity map. Image Credit: Indrani Das/ASIAA.
The figure shows the radial variation of rotational velocity and specific angular momentum with radial distance from the star in astronomical units (or au) on the left- and right-hand axis, respectively, as obtained from the global collapse simulations. The orange-colored region represents the ENDTRANZ of a young stellar system. The vertical dashed and dotted lines represent the outer and inner boundary of ENDTRANZ. Image Credit: Indrani Das/ASIAA.
The young protostellar system L1527 IRS taken with NIRCam on the James Webb Space Telescope (left panel), and the observed gas motions in this system obtained by the ALMA Large Program eDisk (right panel). (a) The radial variation of the specific angular momentum and (b) rotational velocity are shown based on the blue- and red-shifted velocity components. A jump in the observed radial profile of specific angular momentum at the region highlighted in orange color is the evidence of ENDTRANZ where the gas motion transitions from the infalling-rotating envelope to the Keplerian disk. Image Credits: (left) NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI; (right) Indrani Das/ASIAA.
More Information:
This research team includes Dr. Indrani Das from Academia Sinica Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics (Taiwan), Prof. Shantanu Basu from the Canadian Institute for Theoretical Astrophysics (Canada), Prof. Nagayoshi Ohashi from Academia Sinica Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics (Taiwan), Dr. Eduard Vorobyov from the University of Innsbruck (Austria), and Dr. Yusuke Aso from the Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute (Korea).
This research was published in an article titled “Modelling the Break in the Specific Angular Momentum within the Envelope-Disk Transition Zone” by Das, I. et al. in the Astrophysical Journal, with a DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/ae4725.
Dr. Indrani Das, +886-2-2366-5464, idas@asiaa.sinica.edu.tw ; idas2@uwo.ca
Dr. Mei-Yin Chou, +886-2-2366-5415, cmy@asiaa.sinica.edu.tw