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arxiv 1809.00482 v1 pith:XZDPLK5K submitted 2018-09-03 astro-ph.SR astro-ph.GA

Probing the protoplanetary disk gas surface density distribution with ¹³CO emission

classification astro-ph.SR astro-ph.GA
keywords sigmadiskdensityradialsurfaceemissioninputpower-law
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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It is key to constrain the gas surface density distribution, Sigma_gas, as function of disk radius in protoplanetary disks. In this work we investigate if spatially resolved observations of rarer CO isotopologues may be good tracers of Sigma_gas. Physical-chemical models with different input Sigma_gas(R) are run. The input disk surface density profiles are compared with the simulated 13CO intensity radial profiles to check if and where the two follow each other. There is always an intermediate region in the disk where the slope of the 13CO radial emission profile and Sigma_gas(R) coincide. At small radii the line radial profile underestimates Sigma_gas, as 13CO emission becomes optically thick. The same happens at large radii where the column densities become too low and 13CO is not able to efficiently self-shield. If the gas surface density profile is a simple power-law of the radius, the input power-law index can be retrieved within 20% uncertainty if one choses the proper radial range. If instead Sigma_gas(R) follows the self-similar solution for a viscously evolving disk, retrieving the input power-law index becomes challenging, in particular for small disks. Nevertheless, it is found that the power-law index can be in any case reliably fitted at a given line intensity contour around 6 K km/s, and this produces a practical method to constrain the slope of Sigma_gas(R). Application of such a method is shown in the case study of the TW Hya disk. Spatially resolved 13CO line radial profiles are promising to probe the disk surface density distribution, as they directly trace Sigma_gas(R)profile at radii well resolvable by ALMA. There, chemical processes like freeze-out and isotope selective photodissociation do not affect the emission, and, assuming that the volatile carbon does not change with radius, no chemical model is needed when interpreting the observations.

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