8,374 research outputs found
Warm Molecular Layers in Protoplanetary Disks
We have investigated molecular distributions in protoplanetary disks,
adopting a disk model with a temperature gradient in the vertical direction.
The model produces sufficiently high abundances of gaseous CO and HCO+ to
account for line observations of T Tauri stars using a sticking probability of
unity and without assuming any non-thermal desorption. In regions of radius R >
10 AU, with which we are concerned, the temperature increases with increasing
height from the midplane. In a warm intermediate layer, there are significant
amounts of gaseous molecules owing to thermal desorption and efficient
shielding of ultraviolet radiation by the flared disk. The column densities of
HCN, CN, CS, H2CO, HNC and HCO+ obtained from our model are in good agreement
with the observations of DM Tau, but are smaller than those of LkCa15.
Molecular line profiles from our disk models are calculated using a
2-dimensional non-local-thermal-equilibrium (NLTE) molecular-line radiative
transfer code for a direct comparison with observations. Deuterated species are
included in our chemical model. The molecular D/H ratios in the model are in
reasonable agreement with those observed in protoplanetary disks.Comment: 11 pages, Latex (aa.cls), to be published in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
Two-dimensional Distributions and Column Densities of Gaseous Molecules in Protoplanetary Disks II
We have investigated the two-dimensional (R,Z) distribution of deuterated
molecular species in circumstellar disks around young stellar objects. The
abundance ratios between singly deuterated and normal molecules (``D/H
ratios'') in disks evolve in a similar way as in molecular clouds.
Fractionation is caused by rapid exchange reactions that are exothermic because
of energy differences between deuterated and normal species. In the midplane
region, where molecules are heavily depleted onto grain surfaces, the D/H
ratios of gaseous molecules are higher than at larger heights. The D/H ratios
for the vertical column densities of NH3, H2O, and HCO+ are sensitive to the
temperature, and decrease significantly with decreasing radial distance for R <
300 AU. The analogous D/H ratios for CH4 and H2CO, on the other hand, are not
very sensitive to the temperature in the range (T=10-50 K) we are concerned
with, and do not decrease with decreasing R at R > 50 AU. The D/H
column-density ratios also depend on disk mass. In a disk with a larger mass,
the ratios of deuterated species to normal species are higher, because of
heavier depletion of molecules onto grains. In the second part of the paper, we
report molecular column densities for disks embedded in ambient cloud gas. Our
results suggest that CN and HCO+ can be tracers of gaseous disks, especially if
the central object is a strong X-ray source. Our results also suggest that the
radial distributions of CN, C2H, HCN, and H2CO may vary among disks depending
on the X-ray luminosity of the central star.Comment: 13 page
Effects of accretion flow on the chemical structure in the inner regions of protoplanetary disks
We have studied the dependence of the profiles of molecular abundances and
line emission on the accretion flow in the hot (\ga 100K) inner region of
protoplanetary disks. The gas-phase reactions initiated by evaporation of the
ice mantle on dust grains are calculated along the accretion flow. We focus on
methanol, a molecule that is formed predominantly through the evaporation of
warm ice mantles, to show how the abundance profile and line emission depend on
the accretion flow. Our results show that some evaporated molecules keep high
abundances only when the accretion velocity is large enough, and that methanol
could be useful as a diagnostic of the accretion flow by means of ALMA
observations at the disk radius of \la 10AU.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, Accepted for publication in A&
Thick-target yields of radioactive targets deduced from inverse kinematics
The thick-target yield (TTY) is a macroscopic quantity reflected by nuclear
reactions and matter properties of targets. In order to evaluate TTYs on
radioactive targets, we suggest a conversion method from inverse kinematics
corresponding to the reaction of radioactive beams on stable targets. The
method to deduce the TTY is theoretically derived from inverse kinematics. We
apply the method to the natCu(12C,X)24Na reaction to confirm availability. In
addition, it is applied to the 137Cs + 12C reaction as an example of a
radioactive system and discussed a conversion coefficient of a TTY measurement.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, Accepted to Nuclear Instruments and Methods in
Physics Research
Fundamental aspects of episodic accretion chemistry explored with single-point models
We explore a set of single-point chemical models to study the fundamental
chemical aspects of episodic accretion in low-mass embedded protostars. Our
goal is twofold: (1) to understand how the repeated heating and cooling of the
envelope affects the abundances of CO and related species; and (2) to identify
chemical tracers that can be used as a novel probe of the timescales and other
physical aspects of episodic accretion. We develop a set of single-point models
that serve as a general prescription for how the chemical composition of a
protostellar envelope is altered by episodic accretion. The main effect of each
accretion burst is to drive CO ice off the grains in part of the envelope. The
duration of the subsequent quiescent stage (before the next burst hits) is
similar to or shorter than the freeze-out timescale of CO, allowing the
chemical effects of a burst to linger long after the burst has ended. We
predict that the resulting excess of gas-phase CO can be observed with
single-dish or interferometer facilities as evidence of an accretion burst in
the past 10^3 - 10^4 yr.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted by ApJ Letters (emulateapj format). May
8, 2013: added erratum to correct Eq. 1. This equation was implemented
correctly in our code, so all results and conclusions are unaffected. Figure
2 is updated with minor changes to the labels above the panel
Tentative Detection of Deuterated Methane toward the Low-Mass Protostar IRAS 04368+2557 in L1527
The millimeter-wave rotational transition line () of
deuterated methane CHD has tentatively been detected toward the low-mass
Class 0 protostar IRAS 04368+2557 in L1527 with the Heinrich Hertz
Submillimeter Telescope. This is the first detection of CHD in interstellar
clouds, if confirmed. The column density and fractional abundance of CHD
are determined to be cm and , respectively, where we assume the rotational temperature of 25
K. The column density and fractional abundance of the gaseous CH are
estimated to be cm and , respectively, by adopting the molecular D/H ratios of 2--7% reported
for various molecules in L1527. The fractional abundance of CH is higher
than or comparable to that found in high-mass star-forming cores by infrared
observations. It is sufficiently high for triggering the efficient production
of various carbon-chain molecules in a lukewarm region near the protostar,
which supports the picture of the warm carbon-chain chemistry.Comment: 13 page
Modeling Molecular-Line Emission from Circumstellar Disks
Molecular lines hold valuable information on the physical and chemical
composition of disks around young stars, the likely progenitors of planetary
systems. This invited contribution discusses techniques to calculate the
molecular emission (and absorption) line spectrum based on models for the
physical and chemical structure of protoplanetary disks. Four examples of
recent research illutrate these techniques in practice: matching resolved
molecular-line emission from the disk around LkCa15 with theoertical models for
the chemistry; evaluating the two-dimensional transfer of ultraviolet radiation
into the disk, and the effect on the HCN/CN ratio; far-infrared CO line
emission from a superheated disk surface layer; and inward motions in the disk
around L1489 IRS.Comment: 6 pages, no figures. To appear in "The Dense Interstellar Medium in
Galaxies", Procs. Fourth Cologne-Bonn-Zermatt-Symposiu
- âŠ