Stacking Spectra in Protoplanetary Disks: Detecting Intensity Profiles from Hidden Molecular Lines in HD 163296
Hsi-Wei Yen, Patrick M. Koch, Hauyu Baobab Liu, Evaria Puspitaningrum,, Naomi Hirano, Chin-Fei Lee, Shigehisa Takakuwa

TL;DR
This paper presents a novel spectral stacking method leveraging Keplerian rotation to enhance detection of molecular lines in protoplanetary disks, significantly boosting S/N and revealing previously undetectable lines.
Contribution
The authors introduce a new spectral stacking technique that aligns and combines spectra based on Keplerian velocity patterns, improving detection sensitivity in disk observations.
Findings
Boosted S/N of detected lines by a factor of >4-5.
Detected previously undetectable H2CO lines at >3 sigma.
Method applicable to any systems with ordered kinematic patterns.
Abstract
We introduce a new stacking method in Keplerian disks that (1) enhances signal-to-noise ratios (S/N) of detected molecular lines and (2) that makes visible otherwise undetectable weak lines. Our technique takes advantage of the Keplerian rotational velocity pattern. It aligns spectra according to their different centroid velocities at their different positions in a disk and stacks them. After aligning, the signals are accumulated in a narrower velocity range as compared to the original line width without alignment. Moreover, originally correlated noise becomes de-correlated. Stacked and aligned spectra, thus, have a higher S/N. We apply our method to ALMA archival data of DCN (3-2), DCO+ (3-2), N2D+ (3-2), and H2CO (3_0,3-2_0,2), (3_2,2-2_2,1), and (3_2,1-2_2,0) in the protoplanetary disk around HD 163296. As a result, (1) the S/N of the originally detected DCN (3-2), DCO+ (3-2), and…
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