Chemistry of a newly detected circumbinary disk in Ophiuchus
E. Artur de la Villarmois (1), L. E. Kristensen (1), J. K., J{\o}rgensen (1), E. A. Bergin (2), C. Brinch (3), S. Frimann (4), D. Harsono, (5), N. Sakai (6), S. Yamamoto (7) ((1) Centre for Star, Planet, Formation, Niels Bohr Institute & Natural History Museum of Denmark,

TL;DR
This paper reports the first detection and analysis of a circumbinary disk around Oph-IRS67 using high-resolution ALMA observations, revealing its structure, kinematics, and chemical differentiation.
Contribution
It presents the discovery and detailed characterization of a circumbinary disk in Ophiuchus, including its size, kinematic profile, and chemical composition, using molecular line observations.
Findings
Disk diameter ~620 AU traced by C17O and H13CO+
Keplerian rotation profile indicates a 2.2 Msun mass
Chemical differentiation observed with complex molecules absent in the disk
Abstract
(Abridged) Astronomers recently started discovering exoplanets around binary systems. Therefore, understanding the formation and evolution of circumbinary disks is crucial for a complete scenario of planet formation. The aim of this paper is to present the detection of a circumbinary disk around Oph-IRS67 and analyse its structure. We present high-angular-resolution (0.4", 60 AU) observations of C17O, H13CO+ , C34S, SO2, C2H and c-C3H2 molecular transitions with ALMA at 0.8 mm. The spectrally and spatially resolved maps reveal the kinematics of the circumbinary disk as well as its chemistry. Molecular abundances are estimated using RADEX. The continuum emission reveals the presence of a circumbinary disk around the two sources. This disk has a diameter of ~620 AU and is well traced by C17O and H13CO+ emission. C2H and c-C3H2 trace a higher-density region which is spatially offset from…
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