Gas temperature structure across transition disk cavities
M. Leemker, A. S. Booth, E. F. van Dishoeck, A. F. P\'erez-S\'anchez,, J. Szul\'agyi, A. D. Bosman, S. Bruderer, S. Facchini, M. R. Hogerheijde, T., Paneque-Carre\~no, J. A. Sturm

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA observations and modeling to measure gas temperature and density in transition disk cavities, revealing significant gas depletion and implications for planet formation.
Contribution
It provides the first observational constraints on gas temperature and surface density in the cavities of LkCa15 and HD 169142 using new ALMA data and thermochemical modeling.
Findings
Gas temperature inside cavities reaches up to 170 K in HD 169142.
Gas column density drops significantly inside the cavities, indicating depletion.
Presence of potential planets inferred from gas and dust structure.
Abstract
[Abridged] Most disks observed at high angular resolution show substructures. Knowledge about the gas surface density and temperature is essential to understand these. The aim of this work is to constrain the gas temperature and surface density in two transition disks: LkCa15 and HD 169142. We use new ALMA observations of the CO transition together with archival data of CO, CO and CO to observationally constrain the gas temperature and surface density. Furthermore, we use the thermochemical code DALI to model the temperature and density structure of a typical transition disk. The line ratio in LkCa15 constrains the gas temperature in the emitting layers inside the dust cavity to be up to 65 K, warmer than in the outer disk at 20-30 K. For the HD 169142, the peak brightness temperature constrains the gas in the dust cavity of HD…
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