Constraints on photoevaporation models from (lack of) radio emission in the Corona Australis protoplanetary disks
Roberto Galv\'an-Madrid (1,2), Hauyu Baobab Liu (3), Carlo Felice, Manara (1), Jan Forbrich (4), Ilaria Pascucci (5), Carlos Carrasco-Gonz\'alez, (2), Ciriaco Goddi (6), Yasuhiro Hasegawa (3), Michihiro Takami (3), Leonardo, Testi (1,7,8). ((1) ESO, (2) CRyA-UNAM, (3) ASIAA

TL;DR
This study uses deep radio observations of the Corona Australis star-forming region to place constraints on photoevaporation models, finding EUV-driven photoevaporation unlikely to be the main disk dispersal mechanism in this area.
Contribution
It provides the first stringent observational limits on EUV photon flux impacting protoplanetary disks, challenging the dominance of EUV-driven photoevaporation in disk dispersal.
Findings
Radio emission from disks is surprisingly faint and often non-thermal.
Upper limits on EUV photon flux are too low for EUV-driven models to explain disk clearing.
Observed X-ray luminosities are roughly consistent with X-ray driven photoevaporation predictions.
Abstract
Photoevaporation due to high-energy stellar photons is thought to be one of the main drivers of protoplanetary disk dispersal. The fully or partially ionized disk surface is expected to produce free-free continuum emission at centimeter (cm) wavelengths that can be routinely detected with interferometers such as the upgraded Very Large Array (VLA). We use deep (rms noise down to 8 Jy beam in the field of view center) 3.5 cm maps of the nearby (130 pc) Corona Australis (CrA) star formation (SF) region to constrain disk photoevaporation models. We find that the radio emission from disk sources in CrA is surprisingly faint. Only 3 out of 10 sources within the field of view are detected, with flux densities of order Jy. However, a significant fraction of their emission is non-thermal. Typical upper limits for non-detections are Jy beam.…
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