A Spitzer survey of mid-infrared molecular emission from protoplanetary disks I: Detection rates
Klaus M. Pontoppidan, Colette Salyk, Geoffrey A. Blake, Rowin, Meijerink, John S. Carr, Joan Najita

TL;DR
This study uses Spitzer data to analyze mid-infrared molecular emissions from protoplanetary disks, revealing strong water emission in T Tauri stars but not in A/B stars, highlighting spectral type's influence on disk chemistry.
Contribution
First comprehensive survey of mid-infrared molecular emission in protoplanetary disks across a wide spectral type range, linking detection rates to stellar properties.
Findings
High detection rate of water emission in T Tauri disks.
No water emission detected in A and B star disks.
Spectral type strongly influences molecular emission detectability.
Abstract
We present a Spitzer InfraRed Spectrometer search for 10-36 micron molecular emission from a large sample of protoplanetary disks, including lines from H2O, OH, C2H2, HCN and CO2. This paper describes the sample and data processing and derives the detection rate of mid-infrared molecular emission as a function of stellar mass. The sample covers a range of spectral type from early M to A, and is supplemented by archival spectra of disks around A and B stars. It is drawn from a variety of nearby star forming regions, including Ophiuchus, Lupus and Chamaeleon. In total, we identify 22 T Tauri stars with strong mid-infrared H2O emission. Integrated water line luminosities, where water vapor is detected, range from 5x10^-4 to 9x10^-3 Lsun, likely making water the dominant line coolant of inner disk surfaces in classical T Tauri stars. None of the 5 transitional disks in the sample show…
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