Outflow Driven by a Protoplanet Embedded in the TW Hya Disk
Tomohiro C. Yoshida, Hideko Nomura, Charles J. Law, Richard Teague,, Yuhito Shibaike, Kenji Furuya, and Takashi Tsukagoshi

TL;DR
This paper reports the first detection of a planet-driven outflow in a protoplanetary disk, providing direct evidence of gas accretion onto a forming gas giant planet around TW Hya.
Contribution
It presents the discovery of sulfur monoxide emission indicating an outflow from an embedded protoplanet, offering new observational insights into early planet formation processes.
Findings
Detection of SO gas localized near a dust gap at 42 au.
Outflow velocity suggests a protoplanet mass of about 4 Earth masses.
Estimated mass accretion rate consistent with theoretical models.
Abstract
Gas giant planets are formed by gas accretion onto planetary cores in protoplanetary disks. However, direct evidence of this process is still lacking, limiting our understanding of planetary formation processes. During mass accretion, planet-driven outflows may be launched, which could be observable by shock tracers such as sulfur monoxide (SO). We report the detection of SO gas in the protoplanetary disk around TW Hya in archival Atacama Large Millimeter/sub-millimeter Array (ALMA) observations. The emission line is detected at a significance and localized to the southeast region of the disk with an arc-like morphology. The line center is red-shifted with respect to the systemic velocity by . The starting point of the SO emission is located at a planet-carved dust gap at au. We attribute this to an outflow driven by an…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Planetary Science and Exploration
