Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byGyles Waters Modified over 9 years ago
1
Gas in Transitional Disks Sean Brittain Clemson University, Clemson, SC, USA Joan Najita National Optical Astronomy Observatory, Tucson, AZ, USA 5 th Planet Formation Workshop
2
Interpretation of the SED
3
Malfait et al. 1998
4
F F v Gas in Transitional Disks
6
0.1 AU ~2000 K 10 AU ~500 K 100 AU ~50 K H 2 O ro-vib CO v=2 CO v=1 H 2 UV, NIR, MIR OH v=1 E” J=2 ~500K, J 1 Freezes at ~170K CO v=0 FIR [OI], [CI]
7
Kinematic Information From Spectroscopy
8
Malfait et. al. A&A 331: 221 (1998) NIR A0 star “Transitional Disk” Age ~ 6-8 Myr. Regions of interest. A0 star “Classic Disk” Age ~ 4 Myr Clampin, et al. 2003, AJ 126, 385 C. Grady, et al. 2003, ApJ, 683, 151 F /vF v Wavelength ( m)
9
.. HD 141569 AB Aur
10
T=5600 K Blue: Model (R=9-40AU) Red: Data
11
HD 100546: A Transitional Disk Grady et al. 2005 See also Acke et al. 2006 and Bouwman et al. 2003
12
HD 100546 R in (dust)~10AU R in (CO)=7 AU R out (CO)>50 AU
13
Conclusions Need data on gas in disk to properly interpret the SED CO is a robust tracer of warm gas in transitional disks around early HAe and late HBe stars Non-detection of ro-vibrational CO emission can rule out presence of gas within ~50AU
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.