Survey of Cold Water Lines in Protoplanetary Disks Indications of Systematic Volatile Depletion
| Authors |
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|---|---|
| Publication date | 2017 |
| Journal | Astrophysical Journal |
| Article number | 98 |
| Volume | Issue number | 842 | 2 |
| Number of pages | 16 |
| Organisations |
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| Abstract |
We performed very deep searches for 2 ground-state water transitions in
13 protoplanetary disks with the HIFI instrument on board the Herschel
Space Observatory, with integration times up to 12 hr per line. We also
searched for, with shallower integrations, two other water transitions
that sample warmer gas. The detection rate is low, and the upper limits
provided by the observations are generally much lower than predictions
of thermo-chemical models with canonical inputs. One ground-state
transition is newly detected in the stacked spectrum of AA Tau, DM Tau,
LkCa 15, and MWC 480. We run a grid of models to show that the abundance
of gas-phase oxygen needs to be reduced by a factor of at least ∼
100 to be consistent with the observational upper limits (and positive
detections) if a dust-to-gas mass ratio of 0.01 were to be assumed. As a
continuation of previous ideas, we propose that the underlying reason
for the depletion of oxygen (hence the low detection rate) is the
freeze-out of volatiles such as water and CO onto dust grains followed
by grain growth and settling/migration, which permanently removes these
gas-phase molecules from the emissive upper layers of the outer disk.
Such depletion of volatiles is likely ubiquitous among different disks,
though not necessarily to the same degree. The volatiles might be
returned back to the gas phase in the inner disk (≲ 15 au), which
is consistent with current constraints. Comparison with studies on disk
dispersal due to photoevaporation indicates that the timescale for
volatile depletion is shorter than that of photoevaporation.
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| Document type | Article |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/aa70ee |
| Other links | http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2017ApJ...842...98D |
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