An APEX search for carbon emission from NGC 1977 proplyds
Thomas J. Haworth, Jinyoung S. Kim, Lin Qiao, Andrew J. Winter,, Jonathan P. Williams, Cathie J. Clarke, James E. Owen, Stefano Facchini,, Megan Ansdell, Mikhel Kama, Giulia Ballabio

TL;DR
This study used the APEX telescope to search for CI emission in proplyds within NGC 1977, finding non-detections consistent with very low mass discs and suggesting rapid disc destruction in intermediate UV environments.
Contribution
First observational search for CI emission in NGC 1977 proplyds, providing constraints on disc mass and photoevaporation models in a weaker UV environment.
Findings
No CI detections despite deep observations.
Non-detections are consistent with very low mass discs.
Proplyd lifetimes similar to those in the Orion Nebula Cluster.
Abstract
We used the Atacama Pathfinder Experiment (APEX) telescope to search for CI 1-0 (492.16GHz) emission towards 8 proplyds in NGC 1977, which is an FUV radiation environment two orders of magnitude weaker than that irradiating the Orion Nebular Cluster (ONC) proplyds. CI is expected to enable us to probe the wind launching region of externally photoevaporating discs. Of the 8 targets observed, no 3 detections of the CI line were made despite reaching sensitivities deeper than the anticipated requirement for detection from prior APEX CI observations of nearby discs and models of external photoevaporation of quite massive discs. By comparing both the proplyd mass loss rates and CI flux constraints with a large grid of external photoevaporation simulations, we determine that the non-detections are in fact fully consistent with the models if the proplyd discs are very low mass. Deeper…
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.
