PDRs4All. X. ALMA and JWST detection of neutral carbon in the externally irradiated disk d203-506: Undepleted gas-phase carbon
Javier R. Goicoechea, J. Le Bourlot, J. H. Black, F. Alarc\'on, E. A., Bergin, O. Bern\'e, E. Bron, A. Canin, E. Chapillon, R. Chown, E. Dartois, M., Gerin, E. Habart, T. J. Haworth, C. Joblin, O. Kannavou, F. Le Petit, T., Onaka, E. Peeters, J. Pety, E. Roueff, A. Sidhu

TL;DR
This study reports the first detection of neutral carbon in an externally irradiated protoplanetary disk using ALMA and JWST, revealing minimal carbon depletion and insights into FUV radiation effects on disk chemistry and evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first combined ALMA and JWST observations of neutral carbon in an irradiated disk, showing that volatile carbon is not significantly depleted and elucidating FUV radiation's role in disk chemistry.
Findings
Neutral carbon detected in the disk d203-506.
Volatile carbon abundance is close to natal cloud levels.
External FUV radiation influences disk chemistry and structure.
Abstract
The gas-phase abundance of carbon, x_C = C/H, and its depletion factors are essential parameters for understanding the gas and solid compositions that are ultimately incorporated into planets. The majority of protoplanetary disks are born in clusters and, as a result, are exposed to external FUV radiation. These FUV photons potentially affect the disk's evolution, chemical composition, and line excitation. We present the first detection of the [CI]609um fine-structure line of neutral carbon (CI), achieved with ALMA, toward one of these disks, d203-506, in the Orion Nebula Cluster. We also report the detection of CI forbidden and permitted lines (from electronically excited states up to 10 eV) observed with JWST in the IR. These lines trace the irradiated outer disk and photo-evaporative wind. Contrary to the common belief that these IR lines are C+ recombination lines, we find that they…
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