A Search for Mid-Infrared Molecular Hydrogen Emission from Protoplanetary Disks
A. Carmona (MPIA, ESO), M.E van den Ancker (ESO), Th. Henning (MPIA),, Ya. Pavlyuchenkov (MPIA), C.P. Dullemond (MPIA), M. Goto (MPIA), W.F-.Thi, (Edinburgh), J.Bouwman (MPIA), L.B.F.M. Waters (Amsterdam, Leuven)

TL;DR
This study searched for mid-infrared molecular hydrogen emission in protoplanetary disks around young stars but found no evidence, setting upper limits on warm gas mass and discussing implications for disk models and heating processes.
Contribution
First systematic search for H2 emission in protoplanetary disks using high-resolution MIR spectroscopy, providing stringent upper limits and insights into disk gas content and heating mechanisms.
Findings
No H2 emission detected in observed disks.
Upper limits on warm H2 gas mass are below model predictions.
H2 emission is sensitive to gas-dust thermal coupling and heating processes.
Abstract
We observed the Herbig Ae/Be stars UX Ori, HD 34282, HD 100453, HD 101412, HD 104237 and HD 142666, and the T Tauri star HD 319139 and searched for H2 0-0 S(2) emission at 12.278 micron and H2 0-0 S(1) emission at 17.035 micron with VISIR, ESO-VLT's high-resolution MIR spectrograph. None of the sources present evidence for H2 emission. Stringent 3sigma upper limits to the integrated line fluxes and the mass of optically thin warm gas in the disks are derived. The disks contain less than a few tenths of Jupiter mass of optically thin H2 gas at 150 K at most, and less than a few Earth masses of optically thin H2 gas at 300 K and higher temperatures. We compare our results to a Chiang and Goldreich (1997, CG97) two-layer disk model. The upper limits to the disk's optically thin warm gas mass are smaller than the amount of warm gas in the interior layer of the disk, but they are much larger…
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