- 1Department of Astrophysics, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria
- 2Institut für Astro- und Teilchenphysik, Universität Innsbruck, Innsbruck, Austria
- 3Research Institute of Physics, Southern Federal University, Rostov-on-Don, Russia
- 4Fakultät für Physik, Universität Duisburg-Essen, Duisburg, Germany
- 5Department of Physics, Middlebury College, Middlebury, VT, United States
Knowing the masses and sizes of protoplanetary disks is of fundamental importance for the contemporary theories of planet formation. However, their measurements are associated with large uncertainties. In this proof of concept study, we focus on the very early stages of disk evolution, concurrent with the formation of the protostellar seed, because it is then that the initial conditions for subsequent planet formation are likely established. Using three-dimensional hydrodynamic simulations of a protoplanetary disk followed by radiation transfer postprocessing, we constructed synthetic disk images at millimeter wavelengths. We then calculated the synthetic disk radii and masses using an algorithm that is often applied to observations of protoplanetary disks with ALMA, and compared the resulting values with the actual disk mass and size derived directly from hydrodynamic modeling. We paid specific attention to the effects of dust growth on the discrepancy between synthetic and intrinsic disk masses and radii. We find that the dust mass is likely underestimated in Band 6 by factors of 1.4–4.2 when Ossenkopf & Henning opacities and typical dust temperatures are used, but the discrepancy reduces in Band 3, where the dust mass can be even overestimated. Dust growth affects both disk mass and size estimates via the dust-size-dependent opacity, and extremely low values of dust temperature (
1 Introduction
Knowing the masses of protoplanetary disks is of fundamental importance for the contemporary theories of planet formation. The mass of gas in the disk influences its tendency to undergo gravitational instability and form planets through disk gravitational fragmentation (Mayer et al., 2007; Vorobyov, 2013; Nayakshin, 2017; Mercer and Stamatellos, 2020; Boss and Kanodia, 2023; Xu et al., 2025). The mass of dust in the disk sets the upper limits on the masses of terrestrial planets and cores of giant planets to be formed via planetesimal hierarchical growth or pebble accretion (Pollack et al., 1996; Lambrechts and Johansen, 2012; Jin and Li, 2014). Dust particles at the upper part of the size spectrum are the main carriers of dust mass in the disk (Birnstiel et al., 2016), but they also contribute strongly to the (sub-)millimeter opacity in the outer cold and gravitationally unstable disk regions if their size exceeds a certain threshold value (Pavlyuchenkov et al., 2019).
Knowing the sizes of protoplanetary disks is of no less importance for planet formation theories. Gravitational fragmentation is known to operate in the disk at distances beyond tens of astronomical units, because at smaller distances the high rate of shear and slow cooling prevents disk fragmentation (Gammie, 2001; Rice et al., 2003; Meru and Bate, 2012). The size of the dust disk, which is usually smaller than that of the gas disk (Ansdell et al., 2018; Trapman et al., 2019; Hsieh et al., 2024), carries information about the efficiency of radial dust drift and, indirectly, about the efficiency of dust growth in the system. The size of the dust disk also defines the spatial extent within which planetesimals – the first building blocks of protoplanets – are expected to form. Interestingly, recent observational data on FU Orionis-type objects revealed several features that do not fit into the contemporary models of disk evolution, dust growth, and planet formation, indicating that the disks of these outburst objects tend to be of a smaller size but higher mass than disks around their quiescent counterparts (Kóspál et al., 2021). The time evolution of both masses and sizes reflects the dominant transport and loss mechanisms of mass and angular momentum in a protoplanetary disk (Manara et al., 2023).
While the masses and sizes of the gas disk are usually obtained via the observations of CO isotopologues, sometimes complemented with
Estimates of dust mass in the disk are no less affected by uncertainties in the dust opacity, inclination, and dust temperature (Dunham et al., 2014; Tobin et al., 2020; Tychoniec et al., 2020), particularly, if the optically thin assumption is made. The latter may be justified for evolved Class II systems, but not for younger Class 0/I counterparts. The situation may become even more complicated in protostellar systems that are in their earliest stages of formation. Observationally, these objects may reveal themselves as very low luminosity objects or VELLOs (Dunham et al., 2010; Kim et al., 2019), which may be the first hydrostatic cores (FHSCs) surrounded by nascent disks (Vorobyov et al., 2017a). Indeed, numerical hydrodynamics simulations indicate that a protoplanetary disk may start forming before the FHSC collapses due to molecular hydrogen dissociation to form the protostellar seed (Inutsuka, 2012; Tomida et al., 2015; Vorobyov et al., 2024).
In this work, we aim to determine the accuracy of the dust mass and disk radius measurements in a protoplanetary disk in its very early stages that are concurrent with the formation of the protostellar seed. This is important because this stage is likely to set the initial dust repository for subsequent planet formation. To this end, we produce synthetic observables of the protoplanetary disk made with a dust distribution derived from three-dimensional numerical hydrodynamics simulations of cloud collapse and disk formation.
We also consider models with artificially imposed limits on the maximum dust size to account for electrostatic or bouncing barriers, which are not considered self-consistently in the dust growth model (Vorobyov et al., 2025). This allows us to connect numerical simulations with synthetic observations and test the basic assumptions underlying dust mass and disk radius estimates in real observations. In Sect. 2 the numerical hydrodynamics model is briefly reviewed. The methods to estimate disk masses and sizes from numerical data are described in Sect. 3. The main results are presented in Sect. 4. Model limitations and comparison with previous work are provided in Sect. 5. Main conclusions are summarized in Sect. 6.
2 Numerical model
In this section, we provide a basic description of the numerical hydrodynamics model employed to simulate the formation of a protoplanetary disk. We used the three-dimensional ngFEOSAD code to simulate the gravitational collapse of a pre-stellar cloud and early evolution of a nascent protoplanetary disk. The code solves the equations of gas and dust dynamics including self-gravity and dust growth in the polytropic approximation on nested Cartesian meshes. The detailed description of the code and the pertinent equations can be found in Vorobyov et al. (2024), and also in a concise form in Supplementary Appendix 7. Here, we provide the basic information that is relevant to calculating the synthetic observables of our model protoplanetary disk.
The numerical simulations start from the gravitational collapse of a slowly rotating Bonnor-Ebert sphere with a mass of
The dust-to-gas mass ratio throughout the computational domain begins to deviate from the initial value as collapse proceeds, the disk forms, and dust starts growing and settling to the disk midplane. Dust enhancement of the innermost cloud regions occur already in the predisk stage due to differential collapse of gas and dust in the cloud (Bate, 2022). Mild dust growth also occurs in the collapse stage (Vorobyov et al., 2025), but its main phase begins when the FHSC forms and the disk begins to build around the FHSC owing to conservation of angular momentum of infalling matter. We terminate the simulations just before the FHSC is about to collapse due to molecular hydrogen dissociation and to form the protostellar seed. We therefore address the very early stages of evolution when the luminosity of the central source is still low but the protoplanetary disk may already have started to form. Considering these early stages of disk evolution also makes it easier to model the synthetic disk images because uncertainties with the luminosity and radius of a young stellar object are lifted (Vorobyov et al., 2017b). We note that while compact disks around FHSCs were theoretically and numerically predicted (Tomida et al., 2015; Wurster et al., 2021; Vorobyov et al., 2025), they are still observationally elusive. The more advanced stage when the central protostar reaches a mass of
Relevant to our model are the choices of the turbulent viscosity
We used 12 nested grids with the linear size of the outermost grid equal to 0.09 pc. The number of grid cells per Cartesian coordinate direction of each nested grid is
3 Estimates of disk masses and sizes
In this section, we describe the method we used to derive the disk masses and sizes directly from our numerical hydrodynamics simulations. We also explain how we obtained synthetic observables of the protoplanetary disk with a radiation transfer tool and used these observables to compare the synthetic disk masses and sizes with those derived directly from hydrodynamic modeling.
3.1 Deriving the disk mass and size from hydrodynamic simulations
The first step in our procedure is to derive the disk mass using the three-dimensional distribution of gas densities and velocities in our computational domain. To do that in a numerical model that self-consistently computes the cloud-to-disk transition, we have to develop a means of distinguishing the disk from the infalling cloud. For this purpose, we adopted the disk tracking conditions outlined in Joos et al. (2012). In particular, we used the following criteria to determine if a particular computational cell in the entire computational domain belongs to the disk, and not to the infalling cloud:
• the gas rotational velocity must be faster than twice the radial infall velocity,
• the gas rotational velocity must be faster than twice the vertical infall velocity,
• gas must not be thermally supported,
• the gas number density must be higher than
Here,
At the earliest stages of disk evolution considered in this work (
3.2 Construction of synthetic disk images in dust continuum emission
The second step is to obtain the simulated images of our model disks in millimeter wavebands. For this purpose, we employed the RADMC-3D radiative transfer tool (Dullemond et al., 2012) and postprocessed the resulting synthetic fluxes with the ALMA Observational Support Tool (ALMA OST) to account for atmospheric effects and finite interferometer resolution. The input parameters into RADMC-3D are the three-dimensional dust volume density, temperature, and dust size distributions obtained from ngFEOSAD and the output is the radiation intensity distribution at a specific wavelength. Since we modeled the earliest stages of evolution, the radiation of the central star was neglected.
In the RADMC-3D radiation transfer simulations we used the Cartesian grid with the mesh refinement option. It allows us to directly map the ngFEOSAD nested meshes onto the RADMC-3D grid layout. We considered eight inner nested meshes of ngFEOSAD, which encompass a cube with an edge size of 1,100 au centered at the FHSC. Importing the dust content of the disk into RADMC-3D calculations requires specifying its density, temperature, and dust opacity. While the first two were taken directly from hydrodynamic modeling, the absorption and scattering dust opacities were obtained using the opTool (Woitke et al., 2016) for dust grains with a fixed minimum dust size of
In each Monte-Carlo RADMC-3D simulation we set the number of photons to
3.3 Estimates of disk masses and sizes from radiation fluxes
The final step is to derive the disk masses and sizes from the radiation fluxes obtained with RADMC-3D and postprocessed with ALMA OST as described above. For this purpose, we follow an approach usually employed when inferring the masses and sizes of dust disks from observations in (sub)-mm wavebands (e.g., Tobin et al., 2020; Kóspál et al., 2021). First, we determine the radial extent within which 90% or 97% of the total flux at a given wavelength is confined,
Once the radius of our synthetic disk is calculated, the dust mass of the disk is estimated using the following equation
where
4 Results
In this section, the comparison between the disk masses and sizes derived directly from hydrodynamic modeling with those derived from synthetic radiation fluxes is carried out.
4.1 Model disk characteristics and synthetic images
Figure 1 presents the spatial distribution of the main disk characteristics in the disk midplane and at the vertical slice taken through the
Figure 1. Model disk in the midplane and across a vertical slice. Shown are from top to bottom and from left to right: gas volume density, grown dust volume density, maximum dust size, and temperature.
The vertical slices reveal a radially flared gas density profile with local bulges, which correspond to the position of spiral arms. Dust settling to the disk midplane is manifested by a narrower dust density distribution than that of gas. The maximum dust size
Figure 2 presents synthetic radiation intensity images at 1.3 mm obtained by postprocessing the model disk shown in Figure 1 with RADMC-3D. The simulation box is
Figure 2. Synthetic intensity distributions assuming different maximum size of the dust grains in the disk. From left to right:
Figure 2 shows the results of our experiments with a fixed
The effect of sharp increase in opacity is corroborated in Figure 3 showing the optical depth of our model disk at
Figure 3. Optical depth in models with different maximum dust sizes in the disk. From left to right are the cases with
4.2 Postprocessed synthetic disk images in Band 6
As a next step, we take the synthetic disk images shown in Figure 2 and postprocess them with the ALMA observational support tool (OST) (Heywood et al., 2011) to add atmospheric noise and finite resolution effects. Figure 4 depicts the resulting disk images in Band 6 of ALMA with a beam size of
Figure 4. Synthetic intensities of the model disk at 1.3 mm obtained with RADMC-3D and postprocessed using the ALMA OST at Band 6. The three columns show, from left to right, the three assumed distances to the object: 140 pc, 350 pc, 700 pc. The rows from top to bottom are models with:
Several interesting features can be noted from our mock observations. Firstly, the spiral arms smear out with increasing distance and are visually indistinguishable at
Secondly, the synthetic disk radii (
Thirdly, disks in a more advanced stage of dust growth look somewhat bigger. This can be related to the optical depth effects. For the case of
Indeed, Figure 5 demonstrates that the radial intensity profiles of the synthetic disk in the
Figure 5. Radial profiles of the radiation intensity in CGS units after postropcessing with ALMA OST. The profiles are obtained by azimuthally averaging the corresponding spatial distributions shown in Figure 4. The vertical dashed and dotted lines indicate the radial positions within which 90% or 97% of the total flux is localizes, respectively. Panels from left to right correspond to different adopted distances to the source.
The entire disk becomes optically thick in the
4.3 Synthetic disk masses
The first step in calculating the synthetic disk masses is to determine the flux
To determine dust masses from the synthetic disk images shown in Figure 4, we should also know the value of the average dust temperature
where
We could have used the actual hydrodynamic data to derive
Considering these uncertainties we decided not to focus on a particular value of the mean dust temperature but instead used a range of
Using Equation 1, we can now calculate the dust mass contained within the synthetic disk shown in Figure 4, with its radius defined by either
The resulting values are plotted in Figure 6. The synthetic masses of dust vary with
We now compare the synthetic dust masses shown in Figure 6 with the actual mass of dust in our model disk. The latter is calculated by summing up all dust within the disk extent defined by the red contour line in Supplementary Appendix Figure 14 (see Supplementary Appendix 9). The resulting value is
Figure 6. Masses of dust in the synthetic disk. The left column shows the masses as a function of
4.4 The effect of dust-size-dependent opacities
The value of the mean dust temperature depends on the intricacies of the averaging procedure (Tobin et al., 2020) and on the disk evolutionary stage (Dunham et al., 2014; Ansdell et al., 2017), and thus may vary in wide limits. However, this may not be the only cause of mismatch between the intrinsic and synthetic disk masses. Dust opacity is known to depend on the dust size spectrum and, in particular, on the maximum dust size. Since dust growth has proven to be efficient already in the very early stages of evolution, uncertainties with the actual sizes of dust grains and, thus, with the dust opacity may also affect the dust mass estimates. Instead of using the OH5 opacity
Figure 7 shows the synthetic dust masses in the disk
Figure 7. Synthetic dust mass in the disk,
Clearly, there is no universal dust temperature that would provide the best match between the synthetic and intrinsic dust masses in the disk if dust growth is considered and the corresponding dust-size-dependent opacities are used. The dust temperature for which both masses match
4.5 Effects of ALMA configuration
In the previous sections, model disks located at different distances of 140 pc, 350 pc, and 700 pc but observed with a similar beam size of
This setup imitated distinct star-forming clusters located at different distances from the Sun but observed with the same ALMA configuration. In this section, we explore another setup and consider a model disk observed at a fixed distance of 140 pc but with different angular resolution. In particular, two beam sizes are considered:
Figure 8 compares the resulting synthetic disk images. The effect of changing the beam size on the synthetic disk masses and sizes is similar to that seen in Figure 4 where the beam size was fixed but distance to the source was changing. In particular, the synthetic disk radius grows with increasing beam size by about 10%, likely due to the effect of beam smearing, while the dust mass is only slightly affected and increases by less than 1%. It seems that the beam smearing insignificantly alters the total flux, which determines the dust mass estimates (see Equation 1). Although the disk radius increases, this effect has little consequence for the mass estimates because the radiation intensity rapidly declines with radial distance near the disk outer edge (see, Figure 5). We also note that the spiral pattern is significantly smoothed out and barely visible for a beam size of
Figure 8. Synthetic intensity distribution of the model disk at 1.3 mm postprocessed using the ALMA OST for Band 6. The two columns show the effects of different beam sizes:
4.6 Other ALMA bands
In this section, we show synthetic observations of the disk at the ALMA Band 3 (
where the dust opacity index is set equal to
Figure 9 presents the resulting synthetic images. The radiation intensity in Band 3 notably decreases compared to Band 6, as expected for a longer wavelength.
Figure 9. Similar to Figure 4 but for Band 3 with a beam size of
At the same time, the integrated flux increases with growing
We find that the synthetic disk radius increases with distance somewhat stronger than in the case of Band 6. This can be expected, as the linear sizes of the beam in Band 3 are greater than for the case of Band 6 (the latter is generally characterized by higher resolution) and the effect of beam smearing in Band 3 is stronger. The increase in
The synthetic dust masses are shown in Figure 10 for a range of
Figure 10. Similar to Figure 6 but for Band 3.
The reason for a better recovery of the intrinsic dust mass is in the systematically lower optical depths of the disk in Band 3. Figure 11 shows the optical depth in Band 3 for models with different maximum dust sizes
Figure 11. Similar to Figure 3 but for Band 3.
Figure 12 shows the effects of dust growth and varying dust temperature on dust mass estimates. Now, we use the dust-size-dependent opacities (rather than those of Ossenkopf and Henning, 1994) to calculate the dust mass using Equation (1). As for the case of Band 6, there is no universal dust temperature that can provide a good match between synthetic and intrinsic dust masses in the disk when dust growth is considered. For the initial stages of dust growth, when
Figure 12. Similar to Figure 12 but for B and 3.
We also note that the spiral structure is only detectable at a distance of 140 pc and is completely smoothed out at larger distances, unlike Band 6 for which the spiral structure was still visible at a distance of 350 pc (see Figure 4). The
5 Discussion
This work is focused on the earliest stages of disk evolution, when the FHSC or the protostar has not yet provided sufficient luminosity output to start dominating the energy balance in the disk and the disk temperature is instead set by internal hydrodynamic processes. This makes the radiative transfer simulations somewhat easier as there is no uncertainty with the intrinsic parameters of the growing star (such as the effective temperature and stellar radius) and the stellar luminosity output such as accretion luminosity. At the same time, this stage is short and is observationally difficult to capture. There are very few FHSC candidates (Chen et al., 2010; Pezzuto et al., 2012; Duan et al., 2023), and none have been reliably verified to date. Nevertheless, we think that it is important to explore these earliest stages, even though this study may currently represent only a theoretical prospective. In a follow-up study, we will explore subsequent Class 0 and I stages of disk evolution, where the protostar significantly contributes to the disk energy balance, with a similar numerical setup of ngFEOSAD. The current proof-of-concept theoretical work provides an important bridge to more observationally motivated studies of the Class 0 and I stages, including the disk inclination effects which were omitted in the present work.
We found that similar disks but located in distinct star-forming regions at different distances from the Sun can have different apparent disk radii and the variation around the intrinsic value may be substantial, up to a factor of two, depending on the dust growth stage in the disk. When using the Ossenkopf and Henning (1994) opacities and dust temperatures typical for Class 0 and I disks, Equation (1) can yield significant dust mass underestimates by factors of several. The problem is more severe in Band 6 than in Band 3 of ALMA. In the latter case, the dust mass can actually be even overestimated. We also demonstrated that by adjusting the rather uncertain dust temperature in Equation (1), it becomes possible to recover the intrinsic mass of dust in the disk. The best-fit values of
The situation becomes more complicated when the dust-size-dependent opacities are considered. The best-fit
Our model and synthetic disk radii (see Table 6) are broadly consistent with those inferred for Class 0 disks by the CAMPOS and VANDAM surveys of the Aquila, Corona Australis, Ophiuchus North, Ophiuchus, Orion, and Serpens molecular clouds (Tobin et al., 2020; Hsieh et al., 2024). Our model, however, considers the disk at the FHSC to protostar transition and may not be representative in terms of disk mass and radius due to short duration of this phase. In any case, the comparison of the synthetic disk radii and masses with the observationally derived samples was not the purpose of this study. Here, we explored the accuracy of inferring the true disk radii and masses from synthetic millimeter fluxes, excluding the associated uncertainties with the luminosity of the growing star but taking dust growth into consideration.
The mismatch between intrinsic and synthetic disk masses was also reported by Dunham et al. (2014) in the context of Class 0 and I disks, though without considering the effects of dust growth. It was also found that the disk masses may be underestimated by up to factors of two to three at mm wavelengths and up to an order of magnitude at sub-mm wavelengths, in particular, due to uncertainties in the optical depth and dust temperatures, as was also found in our study. In contrast, Harsono et al. (2015) found that disk masses inferred from synthetic observations in millimeter wavelength agree rather well with the actual disk masses of young embedded disks obtained from magnetohydrodynamics simulations. However, the adopted beam size of 5–
We also note that multi-wavelengths observations of polarized dust emission can help to distinguish between small grains with
We finally note that the magnetic field and turbulence can have significant impacts on disk masses and sizes, especially in disk’s early stages of evolution (Seifried et al., 2012; Santos-Lima et al., 2013; Lam et al., 2019; Maury et al., 2022). For instance, magnetic braking and magnetic disk winds can reduce the disk mass and size, and magnetohydrodynamic instabilities can shape the infalling envelope into streamers instead of axially symmetric infall (Machida and Basu, 2025). While the peculiar structure of the infalling envelope is unlikely to affect the synthetic images at mm-wavelengths because of its rarefied nature, a reduced disk mass could also result in lower optical depths, and, as a consequence, in more accurate mass estimates via Equation (1). This effect can be mimicked by our collapse simulations with lower initial cloud core masses, which we leave for future studies.
6 Conclusion
In this work, we investigated the accuracy with which the mass and radius of a young protoplanetary disk can be inferred using its dust thermal emission at millimeter wavelengths. We started with a three-dimensional hydrodynamic simulation of protoplanetary disk formation with the ngFEOSAD code. We then exported the resulting density and temperature distributions of dust in the disk and envelope into the RADMC-3D code, using either the realistic dust size distribution derived directly from hydrodynamic simulations, or making simplifying assumptions about the maximum dust size to explore the possible effects of dust growth. Next, we postprocessed the radiation fluxes with the ALMA observational support tool to generate realistic synthetic images of our model disk at different ALMA bands and with different resolution. These images were finally used to calculate the synthetic disk radii and the dust masses contained with these radii using the conventional method (see Equation 1) adopted in observational astronomy.
Four models with the maximum dust size corresponding to moderate and advanced stages of dust growth were considered:
• When choosing the Ossenkopf and Henning (1994) opacity, dust mass can be underestimated by factors of
• When more realistic dust-size-dependent opacities are considered (see Supplementary Appendix Figure 16), the discrepancy between the synthetic and intrinsic dust masses begins to strongly depend on the maximum dust size, in addition to strong dependence on
• Synthetic disks look bigger at the advanced stages of dust growth
• Synthetic disk sizes grow with increasing distance to the source and deteriorating linear resolution, likely due to the effect of beam smearing.
• Dust scattering becomes significant at the advanced stages of dust growth (
• Spiral pattern generated by gravitational instability is easier detected at the early stages of dust growth (
Both adopted definitions for the disk radius, 90% or 97% of the total flux, can either underestimate or overestimate the intrinsic disk radius, depending on the linear resolution of observations and maximum dust size. This means that a young protoplanetary disk viewed at different resolution and at different stages of dust growth would have different apparent disk radii, and the variation around the intrinsic value can be substantial, up to a factor of two. The effect of beam smearing with increasing distance can be offset by subtracting about 1/2 of the linear size of the beam from the synthetic disk radii. This work provides an important bridge to more observationally accessible Class 0 and I stages of disk evolution. In a follow-up study, we plan to use the developed algorithm to study the accuracy with which Class 0 and I disk masses and sizes can be recovered using thermal dust emission.
Data availability statement
The raw data supporting the conclusions of this article will be made available by the authors, without undue reservation.
Author contributions
EV: Conceptualization, Funding acquisition, Methodology, Software, Supervision, Validation, Writing – original draft, Writing – review and editing. AS: Data curation, Methodology, Software, Validation, Visualization, Writing – review and editing. VE: Data curation, Methodology, Visualization, Writing – review and editing. MD: Formal Analysis, Validation, Writing – review and editing. MG: Formal Analysis, Validation, Writing – review and editing.
Funding
The author(s) declared that financial support was received for this work and/or its publication. This work was supported by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF), project I4311-N27, DOI:10.55776/I4311. AS and VE also acknowledge support by the Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation (State assignment in the field of scientific activity 2023, GZ0110/23-10-IF). Open access funding provided by University of Vienna.
Acknowledgements
We are thankful to the reviewers for constructive comments that helped to improve the manuscript. Simulations were performed on the Austrian Scientific Cluster (https://asc.ac.at/).
Conflict of interest
The author(s) declared that this work was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
Generative AI statement
The author(s) declared that generative AI was not used in the creation of this manuscript.
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Supplementary material
The Supplementary Material for this article can be found online at: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fspas.2026.1728292/full#supplementary-material
Footnotes
1https://almascience.nrao.edu/about-alma/alma-basics
2https://almascience.eso.org/about-alma
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Keywords: dust evolution, hydrodynamics, protoplanetary disks, protostellar disks, stars: formation
Citation: Vorobyov EI, Skliarevskii AM, Elbakyan VG, Dunham M and Güdel M (2026) On the accuracy of mass and size measurements of young protoplanetary disks. Front. Astron. Space Sci. 13:1728292. doi: 10.3389/fspas.2026.1728292
Received: 19 October 2025; Accepted: 13 January 2026;
Published: 11 February 2026.
Edited by:
Ugo Lebreuilly, Commissariat à l’Energie Atomique et aux Energies Alternatives (CEA), FranceReviewed by:
Dipen Sahu, Physical Research Laboratory, IndiaReinaldo Santos De Lima, University of São Paulo, Brazil
Copyright © 2026 Vorobyov, Skliarevskii, Elbakyan, Dunham and Güdel. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
*Correspondence: Eduard I. Vorobyov , ZWR1YXJkLnZvcm9iaWV2QHVuaXZpZS5hYy5hdA==
Aleksandr M. Skliarevskii3