Spectral signatures of disk eccentricity in young binary systems: I. Circumprimary case
Zs. Regaly, Zs. Sandor, C. P. Dullemond, and L. L. Kiss

TL;DR
This paper presents a method to infer the eccentricity of circumprimary disks in young binary systems using high-resolution near-infrared spectroscopy of CO emission lines, providing insights into planet formation conditions.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel spectral modeling approach to determine disk eccentricity from CO line asymmetries, linking spectroscopic features to disk dynamics in binary systems.
Findings
Disk eccentricity causes asymmetric CO line profiles.
Line asymmetry magnitude is unaffected by binary mass ratio or disk mass.
Eccentricity and disk thickness significantly influence line profile asymmetry.
Abstract
Star formation occurs via fragmentation of molecular clouds, which means that the majority of stars born are a members of binaries. There is growing evidence that planets might form in circumprimary disks of medium-separation binaries. The tidal forces caused by the secondary generally act to distort the originally circular disk to an eccentric one. To infer the disk eccentricity from high-res NIR spectroscopy, we calculate the fundamental band emission lines of the CO molecule emerging from the atmosphere of the disk. We model circumprimary disk evolution under the gravitational perturbation of the orbiting secondary using a 2D grid-based hydrodynamical code, assuming alpha-type viscosity. The hydrodynamical results are combined with our spectral code based on the double-layer disk model to calculate the CO molecular line profiles. We find that the orbital velocity distribution of the…
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