Quantifying the gas inside dust cavities in transitional disks: implications for young planets
Authors:
van Dishoeck et al
Abstract:
ALMA observations of a small sample of transitional disks with large dust cavities observed in Cycle 0 and 1 are summarized. The gas and dust surface density structures are inferred from the continuum and 12CO, 13CO and C18O line data using the DALI physical-chemical code. Thanks to its ability to self-shield, CO can survive inside dust cavities in spite of being exposed to intense UV radiation and can thus be used as a probe of the gas structure. Modeling of the existing data shows that gas is present inside the dust cavities in all cases, but at a reduced level compared with the gas surface density profile of the outer disk. The gas density decrease inside the dust cavity radius by factors of up to 10^4 suggests clearing by one or more planetary-mass companions. The accompanying pressure bumps naturally lead to trapping of the mm-sized dust grains observed in the ALMA images.
Wednesday, June 3, 2015
Gas Density Drop of 10,000 in a Protoplanetary Disk Gap? Exoplanet Present
Labels:
ALMA,
gapped disk,
planetary formation,
protoplanetary disks
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