Lupus disks with faint CO isotopologues: low gas/dust or large carbon depletion?
Anna Miotello, Ewine F. van Dishoeck, Jonathan P. Williams, Megan, Ansdell, Greta Guidi, Michiel Hogerheijde, Carlo F. Manara, Marco Tazzari,, Leonardo Testi, Nienke van der Marel, and Sierk van Terwisga

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA observations and physical-chemical models to analyze gas and dust in Lupus protoplanetary disks, revealing very low gas/dust ratios possibly due to rapid gas loss or chemical evolution, with carbon depletion being a key factor.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive analysis of CO isotopologues in Lupus disks, combining observations with models to explore gas mass and chemical processes affecting disk composition.
Findings
Most disks have gas masses less than 1 Jupiter mass.
Gas/dust ratios are typically between 1 and 10.
Carbon depletion likely causes low CO line luminosities.
Abstract
An era has started in which gas and dust can be observed independently in protoplanetary disks, thanks to the recent surveys with ALMA. The first near-complete high-resolution disk survey in both dust and gas in a single star-forming region has been carried out in Lupus, finding surprisingly low gas/dust ratios. The goal of this work is to fully exploit CO isotopologues observations in Lupus, comparing them with physical-chemical model results, in order to obtain gas masses for a large number of disks. We have employed physical-chemical models to analyze continuum and CO isotopologues observations of Lupus disks, including isotope-selective processes and freeze-out. Employing also the ALMA 13CO-only detections, disk gas masses have been calculated for a total of 34 sources, expanding the sample of 10 disks studied by Ansdell et al. (2016), where also C18O was detected. We confirm that…
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