exoALMA。十五。CO发射层高度的解释

Giovanni P. Rosotti, Cristiano Longarini, Teresa Paneque-Carreño, Gianni Cataldi, Maria Galloway-Sprietsma, Sean M. Andrews, Jaehan Bae, Marcelo Barraza-Alfaro, Myriam Benisty, Pietro Curone, Ian Czekala, Stefano Facchini, Daniele Fasano, Mario Flock, Misato Fukagawa, Himanshi Garg, Cassandra Hall, Jane Huang, John D. Ilee, Andrés F. Izquierdo, Kazuhiro Kanagawa, Geoffroy Lesur, Giuseppe Lodato, Ryan A. Loomis, Ryuta Orihara, Christophe Pinte, Daniel J. Price, Jochen Stadler, Richard Teague, Gaylor Wafflard- Fernandez, Andrew J. Winter, Lisa Wölfer, Hsi-Wei Yen, Tomohiro C. Yoshida and Brianna Zawadzki
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引用次数: 0

摘要

精确数据的可用性和新分析技术的发展使研究原行星盘的发射高度成为可能。本文介绍了一个将CO的发射高度与光盘表面密度和温度结构联系起来的简单模型。然后,我们将该模型应用于作为exoALMA一部分的发射高度和磁盘温度的测量,并结合MAPS大型计划的其他遗留测量,得出总共14个磁盘的CO柱密度和表面密度分布图(假设CO丰度)。我们介绍的测量表面密度的方法的一个独特之处在于,它可以应用于光学厚观测,而不是传统的光学薄观测。当我们使用我们的方法对一个已经用两条发射线推导出温度结构的圆盘样本进行充分研究时,我们表明,当只有一个分子跃迁可用时,也可以得到相当准确的估计。用我们的方法,我们得到了12CO和13CO的独立约束,我们发现它们在使用标准12C/13C同位素比值时基本一致。与使用星际物质(ISM) CO丰度从旋转曲线动态得到的值相比,我们的方法得到的质量有系统地低,这意味着CO相对于ISM值被消耗了一个中位数因子~ 20,这与其他发现CO在原行星盘中被消耗的工作一致。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
exoALMA. XV. Interpreting the Height of CO Emission Layer
The availability of exquisite data and the development of new analysis techniques have enabled the study of emitting heights in protoplanetary disks. In this paper, we introduce a simple model linking the emitting height of CO to the disk surface density and temperature structure. We then apply the model to measurements of the emitting height and disk temperature conducted as part of exoALMA, integrated with additional legacy measurements from the MAPS Large Programme, to derive CO column densities and surface density profiles (assuming a CO abundance) for a total of 14 disks. A unique feature of the method we introduce to measure surface densities is that it can be applied to optically thick observations, rather than optically thin as conventionally done. While we use our method on a sample of well-studied disks where temperature structures have been derived using two emission lines, we show that reasonably accurate estimates can be obtained also when only one molecular transition is available. With our method, we obtain independent constraints from 12CO and 13CO, and we find they are in general good agreement using the standard 12C/13C isotopic ratio. The masses derived from our method are systematically lower compared with the values derived dynamically from the rotation curve if using an interstellar matter (ISM) CO abundance, implying that CO is depleted by a median factor ∼20 with respect to the ISM value, in line with other works that find that CO is depleted in protoplanetary disks.
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