Warm H2O and OH in the disk around the Herbig star HD 163296
D. Fedele, (MPE), S. Bruderer, (MPE), E. F. van Dishoeck, (Leiden, Observatory, MPE), G. J. Herczeg (KAVLI Beijing), N. J. Evans (University of, Texas at Austin), J. Bouwman (MPIA), Th. Henning (MPIA), J. Green (University, of Texas at Austin)

TL;DR
This study detects warm water and hydroxyl molecules in the protoplanetary disk around HD 163296 using far-infrared observations, revealing a molecular reservoir in the disk's upper atmosphere.
Contribution
First detection of both H2O and OH in the far-infrared from a Herbig star's disk, indicating a stratified molecular layer and providing new insights into disk chemistry.
Findings
Water and OH are located at 15-20 AU from the star.
The gas temperature is 200-500 K, with densities >10^5 cm^-3.
Molecular emission originates from the disk, not outflows.
Abstract
We present observations of far-infrared (50-200 micron) OH and H2O emission of the disk around the Herbig Ae star HD 163296 obtained with Herschel/PACS in the context of the DIGIT key program. In addition to strong [OI] emission, a number of OH doublets and a few weak highly excited lines of H2O are detected. The presence of warm H2O in this Herbig disk is confirmed by a line stacking analysis, enabled by the full PACS spectral scan, and by lines seen in Spitzer data. The line fluxes are analyzed using an LTE slab model including line opacity. The water column density is 10^14 - 10^15 cm^-2, and the excitation temperature is 200-300 K implying warm gas with a density n > 10^5 cm^-3. For OH we find a column density of 10^14 - 2x10^15 cm^-2 and T_ex ~ 300-500 K. For both species we find an emitting region of r ~ 15-20 AU from the star. We argue that the molecular emission arises from the…
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