A candidate 0.3-7.6 MJup companion is reported in the gap of the ~2.8 Myr pre-transitional disk around WRAY 15-1880, with an ALMA blob interpreted as a vortex at the m=1 Lindblad resonance.
Detection of [Ne II] Emission from Young Circumstellar Disks
1 Pith paper cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
We report the detection of [Ne II] emission at 12.81 micron in four out of the six optically thick dust disks observed as part of the FEPS Spitzer Legacy program. In addition, we detect a H I(7-6) emission line at 12.37 micron from the source RXJ1852.3-3700. Detections of [Ne II] lines are favored by low mid-infrared excess emission. Both stellar X-rays and extreme UV (EUV) photons can sufficiently ionize the disk surface to reproduce the observed line fluxes, suggesting that emission from Ne+ originates in the hot disk atmosphere. On the other hand, the H I(7-6) line is not associated with the gas in the disk surface and magnetospheric accretion flows can account only for at most ~30% of the observed flux. We conclude that accretion shock regions and/or the stellar corona could contribute to most of the H I(7-6)emission. Finally, we discuss the observations necessary to identify whether stellar X-rays or EUV photons are the dominant ionization mechanism for Ne atoms. Because the observed [Ne II] emission probes very small amounts of gas in the disk surface (~10^{-6} Jupiter masses) we suggest using this gas line to determine the presence or absence of gas in more evolved circumstellar disks.
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Analysis of the young disk around WRAY 15-1880: does it contain a primitive planetary system?
A candidate 0.3-7.6 MJup companion is reported in the gap of the ~2.8 Myr pre-transitional disk around WRAY 15-1880, with an ALMA blob interpreted as a vortex at the m=1 Lindblad resonance.