A tell-tale tracer for externally irradiated protoplanetary disks: comparing the [CI] 8727 A line and ALMA observations in proplyds
Mari-Liis Aru, Karina Mauco, Carlo F. Manara, Thomas J. Haworth, Nick, Ballering, Ryan Boyden, Justyn Campbell-White, Stefano Facchini, Giovanni P., Rosotti, Andrew Winter, Anna Miotello, Anna F. McLeod, Massimo Robberto,, Monika G. Petr-Gotzens, Giulia Ballabio, Silvia Vicente

TL;DR
This study identifies the [C i] 8727 A forbidden line as a reliable tracer for externally driven photoevaporative winds in protoplanetary disks, distinguishing them from internal winds using combined VLT and ALMA observations.
Contribution
It introduces [C i] 8727 A as a novel, unambiguous marker for external disk winds and compares its spatial emission with other lines and continuum data in proplyds.
Findings
[C i] 8727 A emission is co-spatial with disk surfaces in proplyds.
Detection rate of [C i] 8727 A increases in regions with intermediate UV radiation.
[C i] 8727 A is rarely detected in isolated low-mass star-forming regions.
Abstract
The evolution of protoplanetary disks in regions with massive OB stars is influenced by externally driven winds that deplete the outer parts of disks. These winds have previously been studied via forbidden oxygen emission lines, which also arise in isolated disks in low-mass star forming-regions (SFRs) with weak external UV fields in photoevaporative or magnetic (internal) disk winds. It is crucial to determine how to disentangle external winds from internal ones. Here, we report a proxy for unambiguously identifying externally driven winds with a forbidden line of neutral atomic carbon, [C i] 8727 A. We compare for the first time the spatial location of the emission in the [O i] 5577 A, [O i] 6300 A, and [C i] 8727 A lines traced by VLT/MUSE-NFM, with the ALMA Band 7 continuum disk emission in a sample of 12 proplyds in the Orion Nebula Cluster (ONC). We confirm that the [O i] 5577 A…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
