FUV and X-ray irradiated protoplanetary disks: a grid of models II - Gas diagnostic line emission
Giambattista Aresu, Rowin Meijerink, Inga Kamp, Marco Spaans, Wing-Fai, Thi, Peter Woitke

TL;DR
This study models how stellar radiation influences gas emission lines in protoplanetary disks, providing diagnostics to interpret observations and understand disk structure and planet formation environments.
Contribution
It presents a comprehensive grid of 240 models exploring the impact of stellar and disk parameters on gas emission lines, incorporating detailed radiative transfer and disk structure calculations.
Findings
[OI] 63 micron flux depends on FUV and X-ray luminosities.
[CII] 157 micron flux is mainly driven by FUV luminosity.
[NeII] 12.8 micron correlates with X-ray luminosity.
Abstract
Most of the mass in protoplanetary disks is in the form of gas. The study of the gas and its diagnostics is of fundamental importance in order to achieve a detailed description of the thermal and chemical structure of the disk. The radiation from the central star (from optical to X-ray wavelengths) and viscous accretion are the main source of energy and dominates the disk physics and chemistry in its early stages. This is the environment in which the first phases of planet formation will proceed. We investigate how stellar and disk parameters impact the fine-structure cooling lines [NeII], [ArII], [OI], [CII] and H2O rotational lines in the disk. These lines are potentially powerful diagnostics of the disk structure and their modelling permits a thorough interpretation of the observations carried out with instrumental facilities such as Spitzer and Herschel. Following Aresu et al.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Molecular Spectroscopy and Structure · Advanced Thermodynamic Systems and Engines
