An unusual reservoir of water emission in the VV CrA A protoplanetary disk
Colette Salyk, Klaus M. Pontoppidan, Andrea Banzatti, Ulrich K\"aufl,, Cassandra Hall, Ilaria Pascucci, Andr\'es Carmona, Geoffrey A. Blake, Richard, Alexander, Inga Kamp

TL;DR
This study reports an unusual high-temperature water vapor emission in the VV CrA A protoplanetary disk, suggesting a compact water reservoir possibly linked to evolutionary stage or circumplanetary disk presence.
Contribution
It identifies a unique water emission pattern requiring a high-temperature, high-density reservoir with a small emitting area, and proposes a new hypothesis involving a circumplanetary disk.
Findings
Unusual water vapor emission with high temperature and small emitting area.
Similarity to other young stars suggests a link to evolutionary stage.
Proposes a potential circumplanetary disk origin for the emission.
Abstract
We present an analysis of an unusual pattern of water vapor emission from the 2 Myr-old low-mass binary system VV CrA, as observed in infrared spectra obtained with VLT-CRIRES, VLT-VISIR, and Spitzer-IRS. Each component of the binary shows emission from water vapor in both the L (m) and N (m) bands. The N-band and Spitzer spectra are similar to those previously observed from young stars with disks, and are consistent with emission from an extended protoplanetary disk. Conversely, the CRIRES L-band data of VV CrA A show an unusual spectrum, which requires the presence of a water reservoir with high temperature ( K), column density (), and turbulent broadening ( km s), but very small emitting area ( AU). Similarity with previously observed water emission…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Spacecraft and Cryogenic Technologies
