Gh. Moriartyschieven et al., CIRCUMPROTOSTELLAR ENVIRONMENTS .2. ENVELOPES, ACTIVITY, AND EVOLUTION, The Astrophysical journal, 436(2), 1994, pp. 800-806
We have obtained 800 and 1100 mu m photometric observations of a compl
ete, flux-limited, IRAS-selected sample of cold sources in Taurus, who
se infrared and molecular properties indicate them to be low-mass prot
ostars which are younger than T Tauri stars. The goal of this study is
to understand the role of the circumstellar envelope and disk during
low-mass star formation and to search for signs of evolution. We find
a good correlation between the submillimeter flux density (as well as
of envelope mass) with both the mechanical luminosity of the molecular
outflow and with the far-infrared luminosity, presumably produced by
accretion onto the protostar. This suggests that the mass of the disk/
envelope may be linked to the rate of accretion onto the protostar and
to the generation of outflows. However, in contrast to the results of
Cabrit & Andre (1991) we see no evidence for a lower limit to the dis
k/envelope mass which can produce outflows. We also find a significant
difference between the spectral energy distributions at submillimeter
wavelengths of embedded protostars compared to optically visible T Ta
uri stars. The more evolved (T Tauri) objects tend to have shallower s
pectral indices than embedded sources, suggesting (1) an evolution of
dust grains, and/or (2) a more compact envelope and optically thick di
sk in the older objects.