Accreting protoplanets: Spectral signatures and magnitude of gas and dust extinction at H alpha
G.-D. Marleau, Y. Aoyama, R. Kuiper, K. Follette, N. J. Turner, G., Cugno, C. F. Manara, S. Y. Haffert, D. Kitzmann, S. C. Ringqvist, K. R., Wagner, R. van Boekel, S. Sallum, M. Janson. T. O. B. Schmidt, L. Venuti, Ch., Lovis, C. Mordasini

TL;DR
This study models how gas and dust in accreting protoplanets affect H alpha emission, finding that extinction is generally low but can influence line profiles and luminosity relationships at high accretion rates.
Contribution
It provides detailed radiative transfer calculations of H alpha line profiles considering various accretion geometries and opacities, enhancing interpretation of observational data.
Findings
Gas extinction is negligible at low Mdot for most geometries.
Dust opacities at H alpha are significantly lower than in the ISM.
Extinction causes the L_Ha-Mdot relation to become non-monotonic.
Abstract
Accreting planets have been seen at Ha (H alpha), but targeted searches have not been fruitful. For planets, accretion tracers should come from the shock itself, exposing them to extinction by the accreting material. High-resolution (R>5e4) spectrographs at Ha should soon allow studying how the incoming material shapes the line profile. We calculate how much the gas and dust accreting onto a planet reduce the Ha flux from the shock at the planetary surface and how they affect line shapes. We also study the absorption-modified relationship between Ha luminosity and Mdot. We compute the high-resolution radiative transfer of the Ha line using a 1D velocity-density-temperature structure for the inflowing matter in three representative accretion geometries: spherical symmetry, polar inflow, and magnetospheric accretion. For each, we explore wide ranges of Mdot and planet mass M. We use…
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