What can we learn about protoplanetary disks from analysis of mid-infrared carbonaceous dust emission?
O. Berne, C. Joblin, A. Fuente, F. Menard

TL;DR
This study analyzes mid-infrared emission from small dust particles in 12 protoplanetary disks to understand their connection to interstellar dust and their potential as probes of disk conditions and evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a new spectral analysis method using four template spectra to study dust evolution in disks, revealing how stellar radiation influences dust composition.
Findings
VSG emission decreases with increasing stellar temperature.
PAH$^x$ increases with star temperature, indicating large ionized PAHs near stars.
UV radiation drives the evolution of dust particles in disks.
Abstract
In this Paper we analyze the mid-infrared (mid-IR) emission of very small dust particles in a sample of 12 protoplanetary disks to see how they are connected to interstellar dust particles and to investigate the possibility that their emission can be used as a probe of the physical conditions and evolution of the disk. We define a basis made of three mid-IR template spectra PAH, PAH and VSGs that were derived from the analysis of reflection nebulae, and an additional PAH spectrum that was introduced by Joblin et al. (2008) for the analysis of the spectra of planetary nebulae. From the optimization of the fit of 12 star+disk spectra, using a linear combination of the 4 template spectra, we found that an additional small grain component with a broad feature at 8.3 m is needed. We find that the fraction of VSG emission in disks decreases with increasing stellar…
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