Compact Disks: an explanation to faint CO emission in Lupus disks
Anna Miotello, Giovanni Rosotti, Megan Ansdell, Stefano Facchini,, Carlo F. Manara, Jonathan P. Williams, Simon Bruderer

TL;DR
This study investigates whether faint CO emission in Lupus protoplanetary disks is due to their intrinsic compactness rather than low mass or extended structure, using new models and ALMA observations.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive set of physical-chemical models for compact disks and applies them to a large disk sample, proposing compactness as a key factor in faint CO emission.
Findings
Faint CO disks are consistent with being intrinsically compact.
Approximately 50-60% of Lupus disks may be compact.
Deeper observations can distinguish between compact and extended faint disks.
Abstract
A large fraction of observed protoplanetary disks in nearby Star-Forming Regions (SFRs) are fainter than expected in CO isotopologue emission. Disks not detected in 13CO line emission are also faint and often unresolved in the continuum emission at an angular resolution of around 0.2 arcseconds. Focusing on the Lupus SFR, the aim of this work is to investigate whether the population of CO-faint disks comprises radially extended and low mass disks - as commonly assumed so far - or if it is of intrinsically radially compact disks, an interpretation that we propose in this paper. The latter scenario was already proposed for individual sources or small samples of disks, while this work targets a large population of disks in a single SFR for which statistical arguments can be made. A new grid of physical-chemical models of compact disks has been run with DALI in order to cover a region of…
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