ALMA imaging of the CO snowline of the HD 163296 disk with DCO+
G.S. Mathews, P.D. Klaassen, A. Juhasz, D. Harsono, E. Chapillon, E.F., van Dishoeck, D. Espada, I. de Gregorio-Monsalvo, A. Hales, M.R. Hogerheijde,, J.C. Mottram, M.G. Rawlings, S. Takahashi, L. Testi

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA observations to directly image the CO snowline in the HD 163296 disk by analyzing DCO+ emission, revealing a significant abundance enhancement near the snowline and demonstrating DCO+'s potential as a tracer of cold disk regions.
Contribution
First direct imaging of the CO snowline in a protoplanetary disk using DCO+ emission with ALMA, providing detailed abundance and temperature structure insights.
Findings
DCO+ forms a ring from ~110 to 160 AU, coinciding with the CO snowline.
DCO+ abundance is enhanced by a factor of 10^4 near the snowline.
DCO+ exists in a narrow 19-21 K temperature region, useful for probing cold disk midplanes.
Abstract
The high spatial and line sensitivity of ALMA opens the possibility of resolving emission from molecules in circumstellar disks. With an understanding of physical conditions under which molecules have high abundance, they can be used as direct tracers of distinct physical regions. In particular, DCO+ is expected to have an enhanced abundance within a few Kelvin of the CO freezeout temperature of 19 K, making it a useful probe of the cold disk midplane. We compare ALMA line observations of HD 163296 to a grid of models. We vary the upper- and lower-limit temperatures of the region in which DCO+ is present as well as the abundance of DCO+ in order to fit channel maps of the DCO+ J=5-4 line. To determine the abundance enhancement compared to the general interstellar medium, we carry out similar fitting to HCO+ J=4-3 and H13CO+ J=4-3 observations. ALMA images show centrally peaked extended…
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