The chemistry of disks around T Tauri and Herbig Ae/Be stars
Marcelino Agundez, Evelyne Roueff, Franck Le Petit, Jacques Le Bourlot

TL;DR
This study compares the chemical compositions of disks around T Tauri and Herbig Ae/Be stars, highlighting how stellar temperature influences disk chemistry, especially in ices and simple molecules, with implications for observational detection.
Contribution
It provides a detailed model-based comparison of disk chemistry around different star types, emphasizing the effects of temperature and UV flux on molecular abundances and ices.
Findings
Higher water and organic molecule abundance predicted in T Tauri disks' inner regions.
Outer disk molecules show minimal abundance differences between star types.
Ices are more abundant in Herbig Ae disks, indicating chemical differentiation.
Abstract
Infrared and (sub-)mm observations of disks around T Tauri and Herbig Ae/Be stars point to a chemical differentiation between both types of disks, with a lower detection rate of molecules in disks around hotter stars. To investigate the potential underlying causes we perform a comparative study of the chemistry of T Tauri and Herbig Ae/Be disks, using a model that pays special attention to photochemistry. The warmer disk temperatures and higher ultraviolet flux of Herbig stars compared to T Tauri stars induce some differences in the disk chemistry. In the hot inner regions, H2O, and simple organic molecules like C2H2, HCN, and CH4 are predicted to be very abundant in T Tauri disks and even more in Herbig Ae/Be disks, in contrast with infrared observations that find a much lower detection rate of water and simple organics toward disks around hotter stars. In the outer regions, the model…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
