Zooming into the water snowline: high resolution water observations of the HL Tau disk
M. Leemker, S. Facchini, P. Curone, L. Rampinelli, M. Benisty, A. Garufi, E. Humphreys

TL;DR
High-resolution ALMA observations of the HL Tau disk reveal the water snowline is located inside 6 au, with most water reservoirs hidden by dust at IR wavelengths, providing new insights into planet formation regions.
Contribution
This study spatially resolves water and related molecules in the HL Tau disk, directly constraining the water snowline location and comparing IR and (sub-)mm water reservoirs.
Findings
Water snowline is inside 6 au from the star.
Only 0.02%-2% of water is visible at IR wavelengths.
ALMA detects 35-70% of the water reservoir.
Abstract
Water is one of the central molecules for the formation and habitability of planets. In particular, the region where water freezes-out, the water snowline, could be a favorable location to form planets in protoplanetary disks. We use high resolution ALMA observations to spatially resolve HO, HCO and SO emission in the HL Tau disk. A rotational diagram analysis is used to characterize the water reservoir seen with ALMA and compare this to the reservoir visible at mid- and far-IR wavelengths. We find that the HO 183 GHz line has a compact central component and a diffuse component that is seen out to ~75 au. A radially resolved rotational diagram shows that the excitation temperature of the water is ~350 K independent of radius. The steep drop in the water brightness temperature outside the central beam of the observations where the emission is optically thick is…
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