The abundance and thermal history of water ice in the disk surrounding HD142527 from the DIGIT Herschel Key Program
M. Min, J. Bouwman, C. Dominik, L. B. F. M. Waters, K. M. Pontoppidan,, S. Hony, G. D. Mulders, Th. Henning, E. F. van Dishoeck, P. Woitke, Neal J., Evans II, The DIGIT Team

TL;DR
This study analyzes the water ice composition and thermal history in the outer disk of HD 142527, revealing a large crystalline water ice reservoir with implications for planet formation.
Contribution
It provides new Herschel spectra, re-analyzes ISO data, and models the disk to determine water ice abundance and crystallinity, challenging previous claims of mineral presence.
Findings
Large reservoir of crystalline water ice detected
Water ice abundance is comparable to that in comets and dense clouds
Water ice is highly crystalline despite low temperatures
Abstract
The presence or absence of ice in protoplanetary disks is of great importance for the formation of planets. By enhancing the solid surface density and increasing the sticking efficiency, ice catalyzes the rapid formation of planetesimals and decreases the time scale for giant planet core accretion. Aims: In this paper we analyse the composition of the outer disk around the Herbig star HD~142527. We focus on the composition of the water ice, but also analyse the abundances of previously proposed minerals. Methods: We present new Herschel far infrared spectra and a re-reduction of archival data from the Infrared Space Observatory (ISO). We model the disk using full 3D radiative transfer to obtain the disk structure. Also, we use an optically thin analysis of the outer disk spectrum to obtain firm constraints on the composition of the dust component. Results: The water ice in the disk…
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