Mean gas opacity for circumstellar environments and equilibrium temperature degeneracy
M. G. Malygin, R. Kuiper, H. Klahr, C. P. Dullemond, Th. Henning

TL;DR
This paper investigates the mean gas opacities in circumstellar environments, revealing temperature degeneracy issues and providing new opacity tables for different metallicities to improve radiative transfer modeling.
Contribution
It introduces two-temperature Planck mean opacities and demonstrates the temperature degeneracy problem in optically thin environments, offering new opacity tables for astrophysical modeling.
Findings
Multiple equilibrium gas temperatures can exist under the same conditions.
Temperature degeneracy affects the determination of gas temperature in circumstellar environments.
New opacity tables are publicly available for various metallicities.
Abstract
In a molecular cloud dust opacity typically dominates over gas opacity, yet in the vicinities of forming stars dust is depleted, and gas is the sole provider of opacity. In the optically thin circumstellar environments the radiation temperature cannot be assumed to be equal to the gas temperature, hence the two-temperature Planck means are necessary to calculate the radiative equilibrium. By using the two-temperature mean opacity one does obtain the proper equilibrium gas temperature in a circumstellar environment, which is in a chemical equilibrium. A careful consideration of a radiative transfer problem reveals that the equilibrium temperature solution can be degenerate in an optically thin gaseous environment. We compute mean gas opacities based on the publicly available code DFSYNTHE by Kurucz and Castelli. We performed the calculations assuming local thermodynamic equilibrium…
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