Disentangling protoplanetary disk gas mass and carbon depletion through combined atomic and molecular tracers
J.A. Sturm, A.S. Booth, M.K. McClure, M. Leemker, E.F. van Dishoeck

TL;DR
This study combines atomic and molecular tracers to accurately measure the gas mass and carbon depletion in the protoplanetary disk of LkCa 15, revealing a lower gas mass and moderate carbon depletion, with implications for disk evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a method using combined CO isotopologues and N$_2$H$^+$ to disentangle gas mass from carbon depletion in disks, improving upon previous estimates.
Findings
Gas mass is six times lower than previous estimates.
Moderate carbon depletion by a factor of 3-9.
C/O ratio around 1 consistent with water depletion.
Abstract
The total disk gas mass and elemental C, N, O composition of protoplanetary disks are crucial ingredients for our understanding of planet formation. Measuring the gas mass is complicated, since H cannot be detected in the cold bulk of the disk and the elemental abundances with respect to hydrogen are degenerate with gas mass in all disk models. We present new NOEMA observations of CO, CO, CO and optically thin CO =2-1 lines, and use additional high angular resolution Atacama Large Millimeter Array millimeter continuum and CO data to construct a representative model of LkCa 15. The transitions that constrain the gas mass and carbon abundance most are CO 2-1, NH 3-2 and HD 1-0. Using these three molecules we find that the gas mass in the LkCa 15 disk is , a factor of six lower than estimated…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMolecular Spectroscopy and Structure · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Thermodynamic properties of mixtures
