A JWST/MIRI analysis of the ice distribution and PAH emission in the protoplanetary disk HH 48 NE
J. A. Sturm, M. K. McClure, D. Harsono, J. B. Bergner, E. Dartois, A., C. A. Boogert, M. A. Cordiner, M. N. Drozdovskaya, S. Ioppolo, C. J. Law, D., C. Lis, B. A. McGuire, G. J. Melnick, J. A. Noble, K. I. \"Oberg, M. E., Palumbo, Y. J. Pendleton, G. Perotti, W. R. M. Rocha

TL;DR
This study uses JWST/MIRI observations to analyze the distribution of ices and PAH emission in the protoplanetary disk HH 48 NE, revealing high-altitude ice presence and proposing mechanisms for ice uplift.
Contribution
First detailed JWST/MIRI analysis of ice and PAH distribution in a protoplanetary disk, providing new insights into vertical ice distribution and potential uplift mechanisms.
Findings
Ices are located at high disk altitudes (z/r ~ 0.6).
NH3 abundance is lower than in the ISM, consistent with cometary data.
Vertical mixing or disk winds may explain high-altitude ice presence.
Abstract
Ice-coated dust grains provide the main reservoir of volatiles that play an important role in planet formation processes and may become incorporated into planetary atmospheres. However, due to observational challenges, the ice abundance distribution in protoplanetary disks is not well constrained. We present JWST/MIRI observations of the edge-on disk HH 48 NE carried out as part of the IRS program Ice Age. We detect CO, NH, HO and tentatively CH and NH. Radiative transfer models suggest that ice absorption features are produced predominantly in the 50-100 au region of the disk. The CO feature at 15 micron probes a region closer to the midplane (z/r = 0.1-0.15) than the corresponding feature at 4.3 micron (z/r = 0.2-0.6), but all observations trace regions significantly above the midplane reservoirs where we expect the bulk of the ice mass to be located. Ices…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Spacecraft and Cryogenic Technologies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
