论文标题
限制狼疮的原星磁盘中毫米大小的晶粒的径向漂移
Constraining the radial drift of millimeter-sized grains in the protoplanetary disks in Lupus
论文作者
论文摘要
最近对原球门磁盘的ALMA调查表明,对于大多数磁盘,气体发射的程度大于毫米大小的灰尘的热发射范围。线光学深度和径向依赖的谷物生长和径向漂移的综合效应都可能有助于这种观察到的效果。对于来自狼疮调查的10个磁盘的样品,我们研究了没有径向尘埃演化的基于尘埃的模型如何重现观察到的12CO外半径,并确定是否需要径向尘埃演化以匹配观察到的气盘尺寸差异。我们使用热化学代码DALI获得了12CO合成发射图,并使用与观测值相同的方法测量气体和尘埃外部半径(RCO,RMM),这些方法与源代码基础进行了比较。对于5个磁盘,我们发现观察到的气盘尺寸差异大于由于光学深度而引起的气盘尺寸差异,这表明我们需要尘埃演化和光学深度效应来解释观察到的气体粉尘尺寸差异。对于其他5个磁盘,只能使用线光学深度效应来解释观察到的气盘尺寸差异。我们还确定了最初样本中未包含的6个磁盘,而是对同一星形成区域的调查的一部分,该区域显示出显着的12CO发射以外的4 x RMM。这些磁盘不可用,可能具有大于4大于4的气盘大小差异,并且没有大量尘埃演变很难解释。我们的结果表明,径向漂移和谷物生长是明亮和fain磁盘的常见特征。可以在灰尘和气体半径显着差异的磁盘中观察到径向漂移和晶粒生长的影响,而需要更详细的模型和更深入的观察结果才能在差异较小的磁盘中看到这种效果。
Recent ALMA surveys of protoplanetary disks have shown that for most disks the extent of the gas emission is greater than the extent of the thermal emission of the millimeter-sized dust. Both line optical depth and the combined effect of radially dependent grain growth and radial drift may contribute to this observed effect. For a sample of 10 disks from the Lupus survey we investigate how well dust-based models without radial dust evolution reproduce the observed 12CO outer radius, and determine whether radial dust evolution is required to match the observed gas-dust size difference. We used the thermochemical code DALI to obtain 12CO synthetic emission maps and measure gas and dust outer radii (Rco, Rmm) using the same methods as applied to the observations, which were compared to observations on a source-by-source basis. For 5 disks we find that the observed gas-dust size difference is larger than the gas-dust size difference due to optical depth, indicating that we need both dust evolution and optical depth effects to explain the observed gas-dust size difference. For the other 5 disks the observed gas-dust size difference can be explained using only line optical depth effects. We also identify 6 disks not included in our initial sample but part of a survey of the same star-forming region that show significant 12CO emission beyond 4 x Rmm. These disks, for which no Rco is available, likely have gas-dust size differences greater than 4 and are difficult to explain without substantial dust evolution. Our results suggest that radial drift and grain growth are common features among both bright and fain disks. The effects of radial drift and grain growth can be observed in disks where the dust and gas radii are significantly different, while more detailed models and deeper observations are needed to see this effect in disks with smaller differences.