Chemically tracing the water snowline in protoplanetary disks with HCO$^+$
M. Leemker (1), M. L. R. van 't Hoff (1, 2), L. Trapman (1), M. L., van Gelder (1), M. R. Hogerheijde (1, 3), D. Ru\'iz-Rodr\'iguez (4), E. F., van Dishoeck (1, 5) ((1) Leiden Observatory, Leiden University, (2), University of Michigan, Department of Astronomy

TL;DR
This study investigates the potential of using HCO$^+$ and H$^{13}$CO$^+$ as tracers for the water snowline in protoplanetary disks, revealing challenges and conditions for effective detection with ALMA observations.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates the viability of HCO$^+$ as a water snowline tracer in outbursting disks like V883Ori, and highlights difficulties in Herbig disks due to dust and excitation effects.
Findings
HCO$^+$ abundance jumps outside the water snowline at 4.5 AU.
Emission of H$^{13}$CO$^+$ and HCO$^+$ is ring-shaped due to destruction and optical depth effects.
Water snowline detection is feasible in outbursting sources like V883Ori but challenging in Herbig disks.
Abstract
[Abridged] Planet formation is expected to be enhanced around snowlines in protoplanetary disks, in particular around the water snowline. However, the close proximity of the water snowline to the host star and water in the Earth's atmosphere makes a direct detection of the water snowline in protoplanetary disks challenging. Following earlier work on protostellar envelopes, the aim of this research is to investigate the validity of HCO and HCO, as tracers of the water snowline in protoplanetary disks, as HCO is destroyed by gas-phase water. Two small chemical networks are used to predict the HCO abundance in a typical Herbig Ae disk. Subsequently, the corresponding emission profiles are modelled for HCO and HCO , which provides the best balance between brightness and optical depth effects of the continuum emission. The HCO abundance jumps…
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.
