Planet formation in the PDS 70 system: Constraining the atmospheric chemistry of PDS 70b and c
A.J. Cridland, S. Facchini, E.F. van Dishoeck, M. Benisty

TL;DR
This study models the PDS 70 protoplanetary disk and planetary atmospheres to understand how disk chemistry influences the atmospheric composition of forming giant planets, especially their C/O ratios.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed chemical modeling linking the PDS 70 disk properties to the atmospheric composition of its planets, considering different disk evolution scenarios.
Findings
The PDS 70 disk has a volatile C/O ratio above unity.
Planets can acquire super-stellar C/O ratios if the disk remains carbon-rich.
The planetary atmospheres' C/O depends on the disk's chemical evolution timing.
Abstract
Understanding the chemical link between protoplanetary disks and planetary atmospheres is complicated by the fact that the popular targets in the study of disks and planets are widely separated both in space and time. The 5 Myr PDS 70 systems offers a unique opportunity to directly compare the chemistry of a giant planet's atmosphere to the chemistry of its natal disk. To that end, we derive our current best physical and chemical model for the PDS 70 disk through forward modelling of the CO, CO, and CH emission radial profiles with the thermochemical code DALI and find a volatile C/O ratio above unity in the outer disk. Using what we know of the PDS 70 disk today, we analytically estimate the properties of the disk as it was 4 Myr in the past when we assume that the giant planets started their formation, and compute a chemical model of the disk at that time. We compute…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMolecular Spectroscopy and Structure · Atmospheric Ozone and Climate · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
