CO Line Emission Surfaces and Vertical Structure in Mid-Inclination Protoplanetary Disks
Charles J. Law, Sage Crystian, Richard Teague, Karin I. \"Oberg, Evan, A. Rich, Sean M. Andrews, Jaehan Bae, Kevin Flaherty, Viviana V. Guzm\'an,, Jane Huang, John D. Ilee, Joel H. Kastner, Ryan A. Loomis, Feng Long, Laura, M. P\'erez, Sebasti\'an P\'erez, Chunhua Qi

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution ALMA CO observations of mid-inclination protoplanetary disks to map their vertical emission surfaces, revealing diverse structures, temperature distributions, and potential links to disk features and stellar properties.
Contribution
It provides the largest sample to date of mapped CO emission surfaces in protoplanetary disks, analyzing their vertical structure and temperature profiles in relation to stellar and disk parameters.
Findings
CO emission surfaces show wide diversity in height and structure.
Vertical substructures in emission surfaces align with dust rings and gaps.
CO line emitting heights weakly decline with stellar mass and temperature.
Abstract
High spatial resolution CO observations of mid-inclination (30-75{\deg}) protoplanetary disks offer an opportunity to study the vertical distribution of CO emission and temperature. The asymmetry of line emission relative to the disk major axis allows for a direct mapping of the emission height above the midplane, and for optically-thick, spatially-resolved emission in LTE, the intensity is a measure of the local gas temperature. Our analysis of ALMA archival data yields CO emission surfaces, dynamically-constrained stellar host masses, and disk atmosphere gas temperatures for the disks around: HD 142666, MY Lup, V4046 Sgr, HD 100546, GW Lup, WaOph 6, DoAr 25, Sz 91, CI Tau, and DM Tau. These sources span a wide range in stellar masses (0.50-2.10 M), ages (0.3-23 Myr), and CO gas radial emission extents (200-1000 au). This sample nearly triples the number of…
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