CN rings in full protoplanetary disks around young stars as probes of disk structure
P. Cazzoletti, E. F. van Dishoeck, R. Visser, S. Facchini, S. Bruderer

TL;DR
This study uses thermochemical modeling to show that CN emission rings are common in protoplanetary disks and can serve as diagnostics for disk structure and UV radiation effects, without requiring specific disk gaps.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that CN rings naturally form in disks across various conditions and identifies their sensitivity to UV flux, providing a new diagnostic tool for disk structure analysis.
Findings
CN rings are a common feature in all modeled disks.
CN emission brightness correlates with UV flux and disk mass.
CN flux is less affected by carbon and oxygen depletion.
Abstract
Bright ring-like structure emission of the CN molecule has been observed in protoplanetary disks. We investigate whether such structures are due to the morphology of the disk itself or if they are instead an intrinsic feature of CN emission. With the intention of using CN as a diagnostic, we also address to which physical and chemical parameters CN is most sensitive. A set of disk models were run for different stellar spectra, masses, and physical structures via the 2D thermochemical code DALI. An updated chemical network that accounts for the most relevant CN reactions was adopted. Ring-shaped emission is found to be a common feature of all adopted models; the highest abundance is found in the upper outer regions of the disk, and the column density peaks at 30-100 AU for T Tauri stars with standard accretion rates. Higher mass disks generally show brighter CN. Higher UV fields, such as…
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