A new raytracer for modeling AU-scale imaging of lines from protoplanetary disks
Klaus M. Pontoppidan, Rowin Meijerink, Cornelis P. Dullemond and, Geoffrey A. Blake

TL;DR
This paper introduces RADLite, a new raytracing code optimized for modeling infrared line spectra and images of protoplanetary disks, aiding the study of planet formation regions.
Contribution
RADLite is a novel, efficient raytracing tool designed for producing infrared spectra and images from axisymmetric protoplanetary disk models, supporting chemical and excitation analysis.
Findings
RADLite can handle a wide range of velocity gradients.
It rapidly produces spectra for thousands of lines.
It is compatible with current and future observational instruments.
Abstract
The material that formed the present-day Solar System originated in feeding zones in the inner Solar Nebula located at distances within ~20 AU from the Sun, known as the planet-forming zone. Meteoritic and cometary material contain abundant evidence for the presence of a rich and active chemistry in the planet-forming zone during the gas-rich phase of Solar System formation. It is a natural conjecture that analogs can be found amoung the zoo of protoplanetary disks around nearby young stars. The study of the chemistry and dynamics of planet formation requires: 1) tracers of dense gas at 100-1000 K and 2) imaging capabilities of such tracers with 5-100 (0.5-20 AU) milli-arcsec resolution, corresponding to the planet-forming zone at the distance of the closest star-forming regions. Recognizing that the rich infrared (2-200 micron) molecular spectrum recently discovered to be common in…
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