HD 100453: A Link Between Gas-Rich Protoplanetary Disks and Gas-Poor Debris Disks
K. A. Collins, C. A. Grady, K. Hamaguchi, J. P. Wisniewski, S., Brittain, M. Sitko, W. J. Carpenter, J. P. Williams, G. S. Mathews, G. M., Williger, R. van Boekel, A. Carmona, Th. Henning, M. E. van den Ancker, G., Meeus, X. P. Chen, R. Petre, B. E. Woodgate

TL;DR
This study reexamines HD 100453, revealing it is in a transitional evolutionary phase with a depleted gas disk and no accretion, bridging the gap between gas-rich protoplanetary and gas-poor debris disks.
Contribution
It provides detailed constraints on the gas content, accretion activity, and age of HD 100453, highlighting its transitional disk state.
Findings
No evidence of ongoing mass accretion.
Outer disk gas is likely optically thin.
Gas mass is less than ~0.33 Jupiter masses.
Abstract
HD 100453 has an IR spectral energy distribution (SED) which can be fit with a power-law plus a blackbody. Previous analysis of the SED suggests that the system is a young Herbig Ae star with a gas-rich, flared disk. We reexamine the evolutionary state of the HD 100453 system by refining its age (based on a candidate low-mass companion) and by examining limits on the disk extent, mass accretion rate, and gas content of the disk environment. We confirm that HD 100453B is a common proper motion companion to HD 100453A, with a spectral type of M4.0V - M4.5V, and derive an age of 10 +/- 2 Myr. We find no evidence of mass accretion onto the star. Chandra ACIS-S imagery shows that the Herbig Ae star has L_X/L_Bol and an X-ray spectrum similar to non-accreting Beta Pic Moving Group early F stars. Moreover, the disk lacks the conspicuous Fe II emission and excess FUV continuum seen in spectra…
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