Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byRaymond Timothy Moore Modified over 8 years ago
1
ERIC HERBST DEPARTMENTS OF PHYSICS AND ASTRONOMY THE OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY Chemistry in Protoplanetary Disks
8
CLASSIFICATIONS OF PROTOSTARS
12
Dust particles contain 1% of interstellar matter.
17
Cosmic rays produce ions some radical-stable reactions
20
“Primary” Fractionation Reaction (i)H 3 + + HD H 2 D + + H 2 + 232 K H 2 D + /H 3 + >> HD/H 2 Other deuterated species Signature of depletion!!!
22
Successes for quiescent cores: (1)Reproduces 80% of abundances including ions, radicals, isomers (2)Predicts strong deuterium fractionation
23
(diffusion)
24
TYPES OF SURFACE REACTIONS REACTANTS: MAINLY MOBILE ATOMS AND RADICALS A + B AB association H + H H 2 H + X XH (X = O, C, N, CO, etc.) WHICH CONVERTS O OH H 2 O C CH CH 2 CH 3 CH 4 N NH NH 2 NH 3 CO HCO H 2 CO H 3 CO CH 3 OH X + Y XY ?????????? H + HX H 2 + X abstraction
25
Diffusive Surface Chemistry Rate equations (non-discrete) Rate equations (non-discrete) Modified rate equations Modified rate equations Stochastic approaches Stochastic approaches a) Monte Carlo a) Monte Carlo b) Master equation b) Master equation
26
Some Star-forming Regions quiescent cores (TMC-1; gas-grain) quiescent cores (TMC-1; gas-grain) pre-stellar cores (L1544; gas-grain) pre-stellar cores (L1544; gas-grain) low mass protostars (IRAS 16293-2422) low mass protostars (IRAS 16293-2422) protoplanetary disks (DM Tau; gas + accret./desorp.) protoplanetary disks (DM Tau; gas + accret./desorp.) hot cores (Orion KL; gas-grain) hot cores (Orion KL; gas-grain)
27
Protoplanetary Disk (Proplyd) 0.01-0.1 M 0 500 AU Cosmic rays X-ray UV Keplerian rotation T Tauri star – 10 6 yr old midplane Column density UV
28
Temperature and Density Distribution (D’Alessio et al. 1998, 1999) A. MIDPLANE Radius (AU) n(cm -3 ) T (K) 1 10(14) 600 10 10(12) 50 100 10(9) 20 400 10(7) 10 Heavy species condensed onto grains
29
Calculated Major Icy Species at 30 AU from Star (Aikawa and Herbst 1999) Cloud Disk migration inwards Cloud Disk migration inwards can be compared with solid cometary material in solar system can be compared with solid cometary material in solar system H 2 O**, CO, NH 3, CO 2, HCN ices H 2 O**, CO, NH 3, CO 2, HCN ices Deuterated species HDO, DCN Deuterated species HDO, DCN Deuterium fractionation in reasonable agreement with several comets Deuterium fractionation in reasonable agreement with several comets
30
Species Disk(DMTau) Cloud(TMC1) CO 1.4 × 10 -5 7 × 10 -5 HCN 5.5 × 10 -10 2 × 10 -8 CN 3.2 × 10 -9 3 × 10 -8 CS 3.3 × 10 -10 1 × 10 -8 H 2 CO 2.0 × 10 -10 2 × 10 -8 HCO+ 7.4 × 10 -10 8 × 10 -9 C 2 H 1.1 × 10 -8 8 × 10 -8 ● Molecular Line Survey at IRAM30m telescope (Dutrey et al. 1997) Gaseous molecular abundances in disks are different from those in clouds, typically lower, but these are averages in outer disk. Abundance relative to H 2 Gaseous Molecular Abundances
31
Chemical Models of Gas in Outer Disk Performed by 3-4 different groups Chemistry dependent on physical model chosen and on radial and vertical distances Models start with dense cloud abundances and run for 10(6) yr at fixed physical conditions and with various sources of radiation through an inhomogeneous region. Collaborators: Aikawa, van Dishoeck, van Zadelhof
32
Divide outer disk into elements of space; each with density and temperature Details of Models
33
Vertical Distribution PDR Icy Layer Molecular Layer R=105AU 10 9 10 8 10 7 10 6 10 5 densiy [cm -3 ] temperature density 70 60 50 40 30 20 T [K] R = 105 AU Z(AU) 0 20 40 60 80 100 70 K 60 50 40 30 20 10 9 cm -3 10 8 10 7 10 6 10 5 accretion photodissociation Too detailed for observers
34
Column Density 2D rad. trans previous 1Dcalc. Still, too detailed for most observations!
35
Aikawa et al. (2002); physical model of D’Alessio; theoretical results at 373 AU and 10(6) yr
36
Line Profile from Model Disk CO J=6-5 CO 3-2CO 2-1 HCO + 4-3 HCN 4-3 CN 3-2 Line profiles are calculated using non-LTE 2D radiation code. Comparison with LkCa15 (JCMT) (R out =400AU, incl.=60 o )
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.