The 4-400 GHz Survey for the 32 Class II Disks in the Taurus Molecular Cloud
Chia-Ying Chung, An-Li Tsai, Melvyn Wright, Wenrui Xu, Feng Long, Mark, A. Gurwell, and Hauyu Baobab Liu

TL;DR
This study compiles and analyzes broad spectra of 32 Class II protoplanetary disks in Taurus, revealing distinct emission components and suggesting the presence of high-density dust substructures that are crucial for planet formation.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive 4-400 GHz spectra of these disks, identifying emission regimes and proposing the prevalence of dust substructures as planetesimal precursors.
Findings
Spectral indices indicate optically thick dust emission at >200 GHz.
Presence of high-density dust substructures inferred from spectral analysis.
Different emission components dominate at various frequency ranges.
Abstract
We have compiled the 4-400 GHz broad spectra of 32 Class II protoplanetary disks in the Taurus-Auriga region, which represents the brightest one-third of sources detected in the submillimeter band in this region. The spectra at >20 GHz frequency can be described with a piecewise function: (1) a power law with a spectral index 2 at >200 GHz, (2) a power law with spectral index in the range 0.3-4.2 at 20-50 GHz, and (3) a transition region in between these two power laws which can be characterized by a sigmoid function. This suggests that the flux densities at >200 GHz and <50 GHz are dominated by distinct emission components. At >200 GHz, the emission is likely dominated by the optically thick dust thermal emission in the bulk of the disks. In some sources that were not detected at 6.8 GHz or 10 GHz, embedded high-density dust substructures may contribute to a significant…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Superconducting and THz Device Technology · Advanced Thermodynamic Systems and Engines
