Hourly radio variability of PDS70c from time-differential photometry
Pith reviewed 2026-05-07 17:46 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
PDS70c exhibits hourly radio flux variability consistent with HI free-free emission from an accretion shock on a circumplanetary disk.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Using visibility alignment, self-calibration, and time-differential photometry on ALMA 343 GHz observations, PDS70c was detected only in one 2017 execution block where its flux density rose by 170 percent with 3.7 sigma significance, while control sources remained stable. The 2023 dataset shows constant flux within a 15 percent scatter over two-hour blocks, yet splitting those blocks into 20-minute intervals yields an intrinsic dispersion of 49 percent significant at 2.6 sigma. The observed hourly variability, which is averaged out on daily timescales, is precisely the signature expected for HI free-free emission originating at an accretion shock on a circumplanetary disk surface; a planet-
What carries the argument
Time-differential photometry performed in the visibility domain after visibility alignment and self-calibration to extract variable point-source flux from PDS70c while subtracting the time-averaged extended disk emission.
If this is right
- The radio emission mechanism for PDS70c is HI free-free radiation from an accretion shock rather than steady thermal emission from the circumplanetary environment.
- Accretion onto PDS70c proceeds with variations on hourly timescales that are smoothed when averaged over days.
- A planet-to-environment mass ratio below 10 to the minus 4 is required if the emission were thermal, to prevent radiative diffusion from erasing the short-term signal.
- Time-differential photometry in the visibility domain can separate variable embedded point sources from bright extended disk emission in ALMA data.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same photometry technique could be applied to other ALMA datasets targeting embedded protoplanets to test whether hourly radio variability is a general signature of active accretion.
- If the variability is confirmed, radio light curves may become a practical probe of the inner accretion flow around forming planets at spatial scales inaccessible to other wavelengths.
- Independent mass estimates for the circumplanetary disk around PDS70c could directly test the reported mass-ratio upper limit.
Load-bearing premise
Residual calibration errors, extended disk emission, or self-calibration artifacts have been fully removed by visibility alignment and time-differential subtraction, leaving only genuine variability from the point source PDS70c.
What would settle it
Additional ALMA observations of PDS70c at 343 GHz with comparable hourly cadence that show no significant flux changes above the thermal noise level would falsify the reported variability.
Figures
read the original abstract
The radio emission mechanisms from accreting protoplanets, and their variability, link observations and physical properties. We revisit the variability of the ~343GHz (ALMA Band7) flux density from PDS70c (F_B7). The subtraction of the extended time-averaged signal may enable the measurement of the flux density from variable and embedded point sources. Visibility alignment and self-calibration yields close to thermal residuals in each execution block (EB) of ALMA observations, allowing the time-differential photometry of point-source in the visibility domain. The variability of PDS70c is checked against synthetic control point sources. In images of the 2017 ALMA dataset, with three ~1h EBs, PDS70c was detected only on 6 Dec. 2017, where F_B7 rose by 228%+-69% (3.3sigma). Time-differential photometry confirms a rise by 170%+-46% (3.7sigma). An application to ~2h EBs from the 2023 dataset resulted in constant flux densities, within a scatter of ~15%. However, F_B7(t) shows some scatter when splitting the deep 2023 EBs in 20min intervals, with a chi2 test significant at 2.6sigma, and an intrinsic dispersion of 49%21%. The radio variability of PDS70c, observed over hours but averaged out on longer timescales, is indeed expected if the signal is due to HI free-free from an accretion shock on a circum-planetary disk surface. A planet-to-environment mass ratio <1E-4 is required to avoid smoothing by radiative diffusion if the signal is due to thermal emission from the environment.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript analyzes ALMA Band 7 (~343 GHz) observations of PDS70c from 2017 (three ~1h execution blocks) and 2023 (~2h blocks), claiming detection of hourly-scale radio flux variability via time-differential photometry performed in the visibility domain after per-EB visibility alignment and self-calibration. It reports a 228%±69% (3.3σ) rise in imaged flux on 6 Dec 2017 and a 170%±46% (3.7σ) rise via differential photometry, with 2023 data showing constant flux within ~15% scatter but 2.6σ-significant intrinsic dispersion (49%±21%) when split into 20-min intervals; variability is validated against synthetic control sources and interpreted as consistent with HI free-free emission from an accretion shock on a circumplanetary disk surface, requiring a planet-to-environment mass ratio <10^{-4} to avoid radiative-diffusion smoothing.
Significance. If the reported variability is confirmed as intrinsic point-source emission rather than residual artifact, the result would provide a rare observational link between radio flux changes on hourly timescales and accretion physics around embedded protoplanets, supporting free-free shock models and placing quantitative limits on mass ratios that could be tested with future multi-epoch monitoring. The pipeline's use of visibility-domain differential photometry and synthetic controls represents a reproducible approach to isolating variable embedded sources amid extended disk emission.
major comments (2)
- [section on synthetic control sources and time-differential photometry] The validation with synthetic control point sources (described in the section on time-differential photometry and results for the 2017/2023 datasets) places controls at clean locations without extended disk emission. However, PDS70c is embedded within the disk, so its uv-sampling, self-calibration residuals, and time-differential subtraction behavior differ from injected controls; any epoch-dependent phase/amplitude errors correlated with the planet's position would survive the differential step and could produce apparent variability at the level of the claimed 170%±46% change. This directly undermines the central claim that the 3.7σ (2017) and 2.6σ (2023) signals are intrinsic after subtracting the time-averaged extended disk.
- [results section on 2023 scatter and chi-squared test] In the results for the 2023 dataset (20-min binning and chi-squared test), the reported 2.6σ significance and 49%±21% intrinsic dispersion rely on binned data and chi-squared statistics, but the manuscript provides limited explicit detail on full error propagation, covariance between bins, or data-exclusion criteria. Given that the 2017 detection rests on only three EBs with one showing the rise, small unaccounted systematics in the differential photometry could shift the significance below the threshold for a robust variability claim.
minor comments (2)
- [abstract and results] The abstract states the 2017 rise as both 228%±69% (3.3σ) in images and 170%±46% (3.7σ) in differential photometry without clarifying whether these are independent measurements or derived from the same underlying data; a brief reconciliation in the results section would improve clarity.
- [methods] Notation for flux density (F_B7) and error bars is used consistently but could be defined once in the methods with explicit reference to the visibility-domain measurement equation to aid readers unfamiliar with ALMA differential photometry.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their constructive and detailed review of our manuscript on the hourly radio variability of PDS70c. The comments raise important points about the validation of our time-differential photometry approach and the statistical details of our analysis. We address each major comment below and describe the revisions we will make to improve the robustness and clarity of the paper.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: The validation with synthetic control point sources (described in the section on time-differential photometry and results for the 2017/2023 datasets) places controls at clean locations without extended disk emission. However, PDS70c is embedded within the disk, so its uv-sampling, self-calibration residuals, and time-differential subtraction behavior differ from injected controls; any epoch-dependent phase/amplitude errors correlated with the planet's position would survive the differential step and could produce apparent variability at the level of the claimed 170%±46% change. This directly undermines the central claim that the 3.7σ (2017) and 2.6σ (2023) signals are intrinsic after subtracting the time-averaged extended disk.
Authors: We appreciate the referee's emphasis on the limitations of our control source placement. The synthetic controls were positioned in clean regions to establish a baseline for the differential photometry pipeline's performance in the absence of extended emission, confirming that the method itself does not generate artificial variability. We acknowledge that the embedded location of PDS70c within the disk means its uv-coverage and potential residual errors differ, and position-correlated systematics could in principle affect the differential measurements. To directly address this, the revised manuscript will include new simulations injecting synthetic point sources at the precise location of PDS70c, using a model of the surrounding disk emission. These tests will quantify any position-dependent effects on the recovered variability and allow us to re-evaluate the significance levels. We maintain that the per-EB self-calibration and time-differential subtraction mitigate much of the extended emission, but agree that these additional position-matched simulations are necessary to strengthen the validation. revision: yes
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Referee: In the results for the 2023 dataset (20-min binning and chi-squared test), the reported 2.6σ significance and 49%±21% intrinsic dispersion rely on binned data and chi-squared statistics, but the manuscript provides limited explicit detail on full error propagation, covariance between bins, or data-exclusion criteria. Given that the 2017 detection rests on only three EBs with one showing the rise, small unaccounted systematics in the differential photometry could shift the significance below the threshold for a robust variability claim.
Authors: We agree that additional details on the statistical procedures are required for full transparency. In the revised manuscript, we will expand the methods and results sections to provide explicit descriptions of the error propagation for the binned time-differential photometry, including how per-bin uncertainties are derived from the visibility data and any treatment of covariance between adjacent time bins. We will also document the data-exclusion criteria applied and report the complete chi-squared statistics with degrees of freedom. For the 2017 dataset, we recognize the constraint of only three execution blocks and the fact that the rise appears in one; we will add a dedicated discussion of robustness, incorporating Monte Carlo simulations to assess how plausible systematics could affect the 3.7σ significance. These revisions will clarify the analysis without altering the core findings. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity: empirical measurements with standard interpretation
full rationale
The paper reports direct observational results from ALMA visibility data: a 3.7σ flux rise in 2017 PDS70c via time-differential photometry after visibility alignment and self-calibration, plus 2.6σ scatter in 2023 sub-intervals, validated against synthetic controls. These are measurements of flux changes, not derivations. The statement that hourly variability (but not longer-term) is expected for HI free-free from an accretion shock invokes standard free-free physics and a mass-ratio limit from radiative diffusion timescales; neither is obtained by fitting parameters inside the paper's equations nor by reducing to self-citations. No self-definitional loops, fitted inputs renamed as predictions, or ansatzes smuggled via author citations appear in the derivation chain. The central claims remain independent empirical detections.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (2)
- domain assumption Self-calibration and visibility alignment produce thermal-noise-limited residuals that do not introduce spurious variability on hourly timescales.
- domain assumption The observed radio emission is dominated by HI free-free radiation from an accretion shock rather than other mechanisms.
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
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[1]
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work page 2018
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[2]
Table A.1 provides a summary of the image properties in the IB17 dataset. We also tabulate the values ofF B7 measured in each EB as well as in the concatenated dataset. The elliptical Gaussian fits were carried out following two strategies: 1- by fit- ting a beam, assuming that the source is unresolved, and 2- by fitting an elliptical Gaussian. Fitting a ...
work page 2017
discussion (0)
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