Protoplanetary disk masses from CO isotopologues line emission
Anna Miotello, Simon Bruderer, Ewine F. van Dishoeck

TL;DR
This paper introduces a comprehensive model that accounts for isotope-selective photodissociation of CO isotopologues in protoplanetary disks, significantly improving the accuracy of disk mass estimates from line emission observations.
Contribution
It is the first to incorporate isotope-selective processes into full disk models for more precise gas mass determinations from CO isotopologue lines.
Findings
Ignoring isotope selectivity can underestimate disk mass by up to two orders of magnitude.
Considering isotope-selective effects aligns mass estimates with observed discrepancies.
The model enhances understanding of CO isotopologue emission dependence on disk and stellar parameters.
Abstract
One of the methods for deriving disk masses relies on direct observations of the gas, whose bulk mass is in the outer cold (K) regions. This zone can be well traced by rotational lines of less abundant CO isotopologues, that probe the gas down to the midplane. The total CO gas mass is then obtained with the isotopologue ratios taken to be constant at the elemental isotope values found in the local ISM. This approach is however imprecise, because isotope selective processes are ignored. The aim of this work is an isotopologue selective treatment of CO isotopologues, in order to obtain a more accurate determination of disk masses. The isotope-selective photodissociation, the main process controlling the abundances of CO isotopologues in the CO-emissive layer, is properly treated for the first time in a full disk model (DALI, Bruderer et al. 2012; Bruderer 2013). The…
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