Precise estimates of protostellar masses are crucial to characterize the
formation of stars of low masses down to brown-dwarfs (BDs; M* < 0.08 Msun).
The most accurate estimation of protostellar mass uses the Keplerian rotation
in the circumstellar disk around the protostar. To apply the Keplerian rotation
method to a protostar at the low-mass end, we have observed the Class 0
protostar IRAS 16253-2429 using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter
Array (ALMA) in the 1.3 mm continuum at an angular resolution of 0.07" (10 au),
and in the 12CO, C18O, 13CO (J=2-1), and SO (J_N = 6_5-5_4) molecular lines, as
part of the ALMA Large Program Early Planet Formation in Embedded Disks
(eDisk). The continuum emission traces a non-axisymmetric, disk-like structure
perpendicular to the associated 12CO outflow. The position-velocity (PV)
diagrams in the C18O and 13CO lines can be interpreted as infalling and
rotating motions. In contrast, the PV diagram along the major axis of the
disk-like structure in the 12CO line allows us to identify Keplerian rotation.
The central stellar mass and the disk radius are estimated to be ~0.12-0.17
Msun and ~13-19 au, respectively. The SO line suggests the existence of an
accretion shock at a ring (r~28 au) surrounding the disk and a streamer from
the eastern side of the envelope. IRAS 16253-2429 is not a proto-BD but has a
central stellar mass close to the BD mass regime, and our results provide a
typical picture of such very low-mass protostars.Comment: 41 pages, 14 figure