The mid-IR water and silicate relation in protoplanetary disks
S. Antonellini, J. Bremer, I. Kamp, P. Riviere-Marichalar, F. Lahuis,, W.-F. Thi, P. Woitke, R. Meijerink, G. Aresu, and M. Spaans

TL;DR
This study investigates the relationship between mid-infrared water emission lines and silicate dust features in protoplanetary disks, finding no direct correlation and highlighting the complexity of disk properties affecting observations.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis combining observations and models to explore the connection between water lines and silicate features, revealing the influence of stellar luminosity and dust properties.
Findings
No correlation between water lines and silicate feature strength.
Stellar luminosity enhances both water lines and silicate features.
Disks with weaker water lines are depleted in gas or have more dust in inner regions.
Abstract
Mid-IR water lines from protoplanetary disks around T Tauri stars have a detection rate of 50\%. Models have identified multiple physical properties of disks such as dust-to-gas mass ratio, dust size power law distribution, disk gas mass, disk inner radius, and disk scale height as potential explanation for the current detection rate. We search for a connection between mid-IR water line fluxes and the strength of the 10~m silicate feature. We analyse observed water line fluxes from three blends and compute the 10~m silicate feature strength from Spitzer spectra. We use a series of published models, exploring disk dust and gas properties, and the effects of different stars. The models also show that the increasing stellar luminosity enhance simultaneously the strength of this dust feature and the water lines fluxes. No correlation is found between the observed mid-IR water…
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