Literature DB >> 23364742

An old disk still capable of forming a planetary system.

Edwin A Bergin1, L Ilsedore Cleeves, Uma Gorti, Ke Zhang, Geoffrey A Blake, Joel D Green, Sean M Andrews, Neal J Evans, Thomas Henning, Karin Oberg, Klaus Pontoppidan, Chunhua Qi, Colette Salyk, Ewine F van Dishoeck.   

Abstract

From the masses of the planets orbiting the Sun, and the abundance of elements relative to hydrogen, it is estimated that when the Solar System formed, the circumstellar disk must have had a minimum mass of around 0.01 solar masses within about 100 astronomical units of the star. (One astronomical unit is the Earth-Sun distance.) The main constituent of the disk, gaseous molecular hydrogen, does not efficiently emit radiation from the disk mass reservoir, and so the most common measure of the disk mass is dust thermal emission and lines of gaseous carbon monoxide. Carbon monoxide emission generally indicates properties of the disk surface, and the conversion from dust emission to gas mass requires knowledge of the grain properties and the gas-to-dust mass ratio, which probably differ from their interstellar values. As a result, mass estimates vary by orders of magnitude, as exemplified by the relatively old (3-10 million years) star TW Hydrae, for which the range is 0.0005-0.06 solar masses. Here we report the detection of the fundamental rotational transition of hydrogen deuteride from the direction of TW Hydrae. Hydrogen deuteride is a good tracer of disk gas because it follows the distribution of molecular hydrogen and its emission is sensitive to the total mass. The detection of hydrogen deuteride, combined with existing observations and detailed models, implies a disk mass of more than 0.05 solar masses, which is enough to form a planetary system like our own.

Entities:  

Year:  2013        PMID: 23364742     DOI: 10.1038/nature11805

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  1 in total

1.  Detection of the water reservoir in a forming planetary system.

Authors:  Michiel R Hogerheijde; Edwin A Bergin; Christian Brinch; L Ilsedore Cleeves; Jeffrey K J Fogel; Geoffrey A Blake; Carsten Dominik; Dariusz C Lis; Gary Melnick; David Neufeld; Olja Panić; John C Pearson; Lars Kristensen; Umut A Yildiz; Ewine F van Dishoeck
Journal:  Science       Date:  2011-10-21       Impact factor: 47.728

  1 in total
  2 in total

Review 1.  Data-Driven Astrochemistry: One Step Further within the Origin of Life Puzzle.

Authors:  Alexander Ruf; Louis L S d'Hendecourt; Philippe Schmitt-Kopplin
Journal:  Life (Basel)       Date:  2018-06-01

2.  Bringing high spatial resolution to the far-infrared: A giant leap for astrophysics.

Authors:  Hendrik Linz; Henrik Beuther; Maryvonne Gerin; Javier R Goicoechea; Frank Helmich; Oliver Krause; Yao Liu; Sergio Molinari; Volker Ossenkopf-Okada; Jorge Pineda; Marc Sauvage; Eva Schinnerer; Floris van der Tak; Martina Wiedner; Jerome Amiaux; Divya Bhatia; Luisa Buinhas; Gilles Durand; Roger Förstner; Urs Graf; Matthias Lezius
Journal:  Exp Astron (Dordr)       Date:  2021-05-26       Impact factor: 2.012

  2 in total

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