Disk Imaging Survey of Chemistry with SMA: II. Southern Sky Protoplanetary Disk Data and Full Sample Statistics
Karin I. Oberg, Chunhua Qi, Jeffrey K.J. Fogel, Edwin A. Bergin, Sean, M. Andrews, Catherine Espaillat, David J. Wilner, Ilaria Pascucci, Joel H., Kastner

TL;DR
This study presents detailed chemical composition data of six southern protoplanetary disks, revealing how star type influences molecular detection rates and disk chemistry, with implications for understanding planet formation environments.
Contribution
It provides new high-resolution observations of southern sky disks, expanding the chemical and spatial understanding of protoplanetary disks beyond previous Taurus region studies.
Findings
Higher detection rates of molecules around M and K stars.
CN/HCN ratio varies with disk radius in some systems.
No clear difference in chemistry between classical and transitional disks.
Abstract
This is the second in a series of papers based on data from DISCS, a Submillimeter Array observing program aimed at spatially and spectrally resolving the chemical composition of 12 protoplanetary disks. We present data on six Southern sky sources - IM Lup, SAO 206462 (HD 135344b), HD 142527, AS 209, AS 205 and V4046 Sgr - which complement the six sources in the Taurus star forming region reported previously. CO 2-1 and HCO+ 3-2 emission are detected and resolved in all disks and show velocity patterns consistent with Keplerian rotation. Where detected, the emission from DCO+ 3-2, N2H+ 3-2, H2CO 3-2 and 4-3,HCN 3-2 and CN 2-1 are also generally spatially resolved. The detection rates are highest toward the M and K stars, while the F star SAO 206462 has only weak CN and HCN emission, and H2CO alone is detected toward HD 142527. These findings together with the statistics from the…
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