On the gas content of transitional disks: a VLT/X-Shooter study of accretion and winds
C.F. Manara (1), L. Testi (1,2,3), A. Natta (2,4), G. Rosotti (5,6),, M. Benisty (7), B. Ercolano (5,3), L. Ricci (8) ((1) ESO-Garching, (2), INAF-Arcetri, (3) Excellence Cluster Universe, (4) Dublin Institute for, Advanced Studies, (5) Universitats-Sternwarte Munich

TL;DR
This study uses VLT/X-Shooter spectroscopy to analyze the gas content, accretion, and wind properties of 22 transitional disks, revealing that many have gas-rich inner regions similar to classical T Tauri stars, regardless of dust cavity size.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed spectroscopic analysis of gas properties in the inner regions of transitional disks, constraining models of disk evolution and clearing mechanisms.
Findings
Most TDs have accretion and wind properties similar to cTTs.
Inner disk gas density is comparable to unperturbed disks.
Accretion rates do not strongly depend on dust cavity size.
Abstract
Transitional disks (TDs) are thought to be a late evolutionary stage of protoplanetary disks with dust depleted inner regions. The mechanism responsible for this depletion is still under debate. To constrain the models it is mandatory to have a good understanding of the properties of the gas content of the inner disk. Using X-Shooter broad band -UV to NIR- medium resolution spectroscopy we derive the stellar, accretion, and wind properties of a sample of 22 TDs. The analysis of these properties allows us to put strong constraints on the gas content in a region very close to the star (<0.2 AU) which is not accessible with any other observational technique. We fit the spectra with a self-consistent procedure to derive simultaneously SpT,Av,and mass accretion rates (Macc) of the targets. From forbidden emission lines we derive the wind properties of the targets. Comparing our findings to…
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