Ices in planet-forming disks: Self-consistent ice opacities in disk models
Aditya M. Arabhavi, Peter Woitke, Stephanie M. Cazaux, Inga Kamp,, Christian Rab, Wing-Fai Thi

TL;DR
This paper introduces a computationally efficient method to incorporate ice and bare-grain opacities into protoplanetary disk models, revealing significant local opacity variations due to ice formation and their effects on disk appearance.
Contribution
It presents a self-consistent approach to compute ice opacities in disk models, linking chemistry with dust properties, and analyzes their impact on disk structure and observable features.
Findings
Ice formation can increase opacity by over 200 times in the midplane.
Opacity changes are significant only in optically thick regions, minimally affecting thermal structure.
Ice features are more detectable in spatially resolved observations, especially in absorption.
Abstract
In cold and shielded environments, molecules freeze out on dust grain surfaces to form ices such as H2O, CO, CO2, CH4, CH3OH, and NH3. In protoplanetary disks, the exact radial and vertical ice extension depend on disk mass, geometry, and stellar UV irradiation. The goal of this work is to present a computationally efficient method to compute ice and bare-grain opacities in protoplanetary disk models consistently with the chemistry and to investigate the effect of ice opacities on the physico-chemical state and optical appearance of the disk. A matrix of Mie efficiencies is pre-calculated for different ice species and thicknesses, from which the position dependent opacities of icy grains are then interpolated. This is implemented in the PRODIMO code by a self-consistent solution of ice opacities and the local composition of ices, which are obtained from our chemical network. Locally,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Molecular Spectroscopy and Structure · Atmospheric Ozone and Climate
