FUV and X-ray irradiated protoplanetary disks: a grid of models I. The disk structure
R. Meijerink, G. Aresu, I. Kamp, M. Spaans, W.-F. Thi, and P. Woitke

TL;DR
This study models how FUV and X-ray radiation influence the structure and chemical composition of protoplanetary disks, providing insights into their observational signatures and implications for planet formation.
Contribution
A comprehensive grid of 240 hydro-chemical models systematically exploring the effects of FUV and X-ray irradiation on disk structure and chemistry.
Findings
Neutral oxygen abundance remains stable across radiation variations.
C+ distribution is sensitive to both X-ray and FUV radiation.
Ne+ column density increases significantly with X-ray flux.
Abstract
Context. Planets are thought to eventually form from the mostly gaseous (~99% of the mass) disks around young stars. The density structure and chemical composition of protoplanetary disks are affected by the incident radiation field at optical, FUV, and X-ray wavelengths, as well as by the dust properties. Aims. The effect of FUV and X-rays on the disk structure and the gas chemical composition are investigated. This work forms the basis of a second paper, which discusses the impact on diagnostic lines of, e.g., C+, O, H2O, and Ne+ observed with facilities such as Spitzer and Herschel. Methods. A grid of 240 models is computed in which the X-ray and FUV luminosity, minimum grain size, dust size distribution, and surface density distribution are varied in a systematic way. The hydrostatic structure and the thermo-chemical structure are calculated using ProDiMo. Results. The…
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