4 research outputs found
Line emission from circumstellar disks around A stars
The nature of the tenuous disks around A stars has raised considerable
controversy in the literature during the past decade. The debate whether or not
the disk around beta Pictoris contains gaseous molecular hydrogen is only the
most recent example. Since CO is in general a poor tracer for the gas content
of these low mass disks, we discuss here detailed emission line calculations
for alternative tracers like C and C+, based on recent optically thin disk
models by Kamp & van Zadelhoff (2001). The [CII] 157.7 mum line was searched
toward Vega and beta Pictoris -- the most prominent A stars with disks -- using
ISO LWS data, and a tentative detection is reported toward the latter object.
From a comparison with emission line observations as well as absorption line
studies of both stars, the gas-to-dust ratio is constrained to lie between 0.5
and 9 for beta Pictoris. For Vega the [CII] observations indicate an upper
limit of 0.2 M_Earth for the disk gas mass. Predicted line intensities of C+
and C are presented for a range of models and appear promising species to trace
the gas content in the disks around A stars with future instrumental
capabilities (SOFIA, Herschel, APEX and ALMA). Searches for CO emission should
focus on the J=3-2 line.Comment: 14 pages, to appear in A&A (accepted
I dischi circumstellari e il caso di Beta Pictoris
Osservazioni sulle componenti dei dischi circumstellari.ope
I dischi circumstellari e il caso di Beta Pictoris
Osservazioni sulle componenti dei dischi circumstellari
