Probing stellar accretion with mid-infrared hydrogen lines
Elisabetta Rigliaco, I. Pascucci, G. Duchene, S. Edwards, D.R. Ardila,, C. Grady, I. Mendigut\'ia, B. Montesinos, G.D. Mulders, J.R. Najita, J., Carpenter, E. Furlan, U. Gorti, R. Meijerink, M.R. Meyer

TL;DR
This study investigates mid-infrared hydrogen lines in 114 protoplanetary and debris disks, revealing their origin, relation to accretion processes, and potential as new accretion indicators at longer wavelengths.
Contribution
It provides the first detection of H I(7-6) lines in young debris disks and analyzes their connection to accretion, expanding understanding of gas dynamics in different disk evolutionary stages.
Findings
H I lines are unlikely from disk surface photoevaporation.
Line ratios suggest probing gas with densities of 10^10-10^11 cm^-3.
H I line luminosity correlates with accretion luminosity in full and transitional disks.
Abstract
In this paper we investigate the origin of the mid-infrared (IR) hydrogen recombination lines for a sample of 114 disks in different evolutionary stages (full, transitional and debris disks) collected from the {\it Spitzer} archive. We focus on the two brighter {H~{\sc i}} lines observed in the {\it Spitzer} spectra, the {H~{\sc i}}(7-6) at 12.37m and the {H~{\sc i}}(9-7) at 11.32m. We detect the {H~{\sc i}}(7-6) line in 46 objects, and the {H~{\sc i}}(9-7) in 11. We compare these lines with the other most common gas line detected in {\it Spitzer} spectra, the {[Ne~{\sc iii}]} at 12.81m. We argue that it is unlikely that the {H~{\sc i}} emission originates from the photoevaporating upper surface layers of the disk, as has been found for the {[Ne~{\sc iii}]} lines toward low-accreting stars. Using the {H~{\sc i}}(9-7)/{H~{\sc i}}(7-6) line ratios we find these gas lines…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
