Mind the gap: Distinguishing disc substructures and their impact on the inner disc composition
Jingyi Mah, Sofia Savvidou, Bertram Bitsch

TL;DR
This study uses semi-analytical models to explore how disc substructures like gaps influence the inner disc's chemical composition, especially water content and C/O ratio, aiding interpretation of observational data.
Contribution
It introduces a classification of gap regimes based on viscosity and analyzes their impact on inner disc chemistry, linking substructure types to observable chemical signatures.
Findings
Deep gaps lead to low water content and high C/O ratios.
Traffic jams cause moderate water content and sub-stellar C/O ratios.
Gap formation timing affects pebble flux and inner disc composition.
Abstract
Improved observational technologies have enabled the resolution of substructures and the measurement of chemical abundances in discs. Understanding the chemical composition of the inner disc allows us to infer the building blocks available for planet formation. Recently, the depletion of water in the inner disc has been suggested to be linked to the presence of substructures, such as gaps and rings, further out. We investigate this hypothesis further by running 1D semi-analytical models of a disc with a gap to understand the combined effects of disc viscosity, gap depth, gap location, and gap formation timescales on the inner disc composition. Our results show that for a specific value of disc viscosity, the simulation outcome can be classified into three regimes: shallow gap, "traffic jam", and deep gap. While deep gaps may already be distinguishable with moderate-resolution…
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