Tracing planet-induced structures in circumstellar disks using molecular lines
F. Ober, S. Wolf, A. L. Uribe, and H. H. Klahr

TL;DR
This study explores how molecular line observations, especially with ALMA, can reveal planet-induced structures like gaps and spirals in circumstellar disks, enhancing our understanding of planet formation processes.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates the feasibility of using molecular line observations to detect planet-induced structures in disks, providing a new approach complementary to continuum imaging.
Findings
Most disks in the parameter space can be detected in molecular lines.
Gaps are difficult to identify in lines due to velocity field masking.
ALMA can potentially detect planet-induced gaps under certain conditions.
Abstract
Circumstellar disks are considered to be the birthplace of planets. Specific structures like spiral arms, gaps, and cavities are characteristic indicators of planet-disk interaction. Investigating these structures can provide insights into the growth of protoplanets and the physical properties of the disk. We investigate the feasibility of using molecular lines to trace planet-induced structures in circumstellar disks. Based on 3D hydrodynamic simulations of planet-disk interactions, we perform self-consistent temperature calculations and produce N-LTE molecular line velocity-channel maps and spectra of these disks using our new N-LTE line radiative transfer code Mol3D. Subsequently, we simulate ALMA observations using the CASA simulator. We consider two nearly face-on inclinations, 5 disk masses, 7 disk radii, and 2 different typical pre-main-sequence host stars (T Tauri, Herbig Ae).…
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