Resurgence of CO in a warm bubble around accreting protoplanets and its observability
O. Chrenko, S. Casassus, R. O. Chametla

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that accretion heating around protoplanets creates a warm CO-rich bubble detectable in ALMA observations, providing a new method to identify forming planets in protoplanetary disks.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of a CO-emitting warm bubble caused by accretion heating, enhancing observability of embedded protoplanets through synthetic ALMA imaging.
Findings
The warm bubble appears as a bright spot in CO channel maps.
The bubble's emission is detectable with optically thin isotopologs like C$^{18}$O.
Dust depletion in the circumplanetary environment explains the lack of continuum detections.
Abstract
The cold outer regions of protoplanetary disks are expected to contain a midplane-centered layer where gas-phase CO molecules freeze out and their overall abundance is low. The layer then manifests itself as a void in the channel maps of CO rotational emission lines. We explore whether the frozen-out layer can expose the circumplanetary environment of embedded accreting protoplanets to observations. To this end, we performed 3D radiative gas-dust hydrodynamic simulations with opacities determined by the redistribution of submicron- and millimeter-sized dust grains. A Jupiter-mass planet with an accretion luminosity of was considered as the nominal case. The accretion heating sustains a warm bubble around the planet, which locally increases the abundance of gas-phase CO molecules. Radiative transfer predictions of the emergent sky images show that the bubble…
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