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Constraining the Structure of the Transition Disk HD 135344B (SAO 206462) by Simultaneous Modeling of Multiwavelength Gas and Dust ObservationsContext: Constraining the gas and dust disk structure of transition disks, particularly in the inner dust cavity, is a crucial step toward understanding the link between them and planet formation. HD 135344B is an accreting (pre-)transition disk that displays the CO 4.7 micrometer emission extending tens of AU inside its 30 AU dust cavity. Aims: We constrain HD 135344B's disk structure from multi-instrument gas and dust observations. Methods: We used the dust radiative transfer code MCFOST and the thermochemical code ProDiMo to derive the disk structure from the simultaneous modeling of the spectral energy distribution (SED), VLT/CRIRES CO P(10) 4.75 Micrometers, Herschel/PACS [O(sub I)] 63 Micrometers, Spitzer/IRS, and JCMT CO-12 J = 3−2 spectra, VLTI/PIONIER H-band visibilities, and constraints from (sub-)mm continuum interferometry and near-IR imaging. Results: We found a disk model able to describe the current gas and dust observations simultaneously. This disk has the following structure. (1) To simultaneously reproduce the SED, the near-IR interferometry data, and the CO ro-vibrational emission, refractory grains (we suggest carbon) are present inside the silicate sublimation radius (0.08 is less than R less than 0.2 AU). (2) The dust cavity (R is less than 30 AU) is filled with gas, the surface density of the gas inside the cavity must increase with radius to fit the CO ro-vibrational line profile, a small gap of a few AU in the gas distribution is compatible with current data, and a large gap of tens of AU in the gas does not appear likely. (4) The gas-to-dust ratio inside the cavity is >100 to account for the 870 Micrometers continuum upper limit and the CO P(10) line flux. (5) The gas-to-dust ratio in the outer disk (30 is less than R less than 200 AU) is less than 10 to simultaneously describe the [O(sub I)] 63 Micrometers line flux and the CO P(10) line profile. (6) In the outer disk, most of the gas and dust mass should be located in the midplane, and a significant fraction of the dust should be in large grains. Conclusions: Simultaneous modeling of the gas and dust is required to break the model degeneracies and constrain the disk structure. An increasing gas surface density with radius in the inner cavity echoes the effect of a migrating Jovian planet in the disk structure. The low gas mass (a few Jupiter masses) throughout the HD 135344B disk supports the idea that it is an evolved disk that has already lost a large portion of its mass.
Document ID
20150000295
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Carmona, A.
(Institut de Planetologie et d'Asrophysique Grenoble, France)
Pinte, C.
(Institut de Planetologie et d'Asrophysique Grenoble, France)
Thi, W. F.
(Institut de Planetologie et d'Asrophysique Grenoble, France)
Benisty, M.
(Institut de Planetologie et d'Asrophysique Grenoble, France)
Menard, F.
(Institut de Planetologie et d'Asrophysique Grenoble, France)
Grady, C.
(Eureka Scientific, Inc. Laurel, MD, United States)
Kamp, I.
(Kapteyn Astronomical Lab. Groningen, Netherlands)
Woitke, P.
(Saint Andrew's Univ. Scotland)
Olofsson, J.
(Max-Planck-Inst. fuer Astronomie Heidelberg, Germany)
Roberge, A.
(NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, MD, United States)
Brittain, S.
(Clemson Univ. SC, United States)
Duchene, G.
(California Univ. Berkeley, CA, United States)
Meeus, G.
(Autonoma de Madrid Univ. Madrid, Spain)
Martin-Zaidi, C.
(Institut de Planetologie et d'Asrophysique Grenoble, France)
Dent, B.
(Naoji Foundation Santiago)
Le Bouquin, J. E.
(Institut de Planetologie et d'Asrophysique Grenoble, France)
Berger, J. P.
(Institut de Planetologie et d'Asrophysique Grenoble, France)
Date Acquired
January 8, 2015
Publication Date
March 23, 2014
Publication Information
Publication: Astronomy & Astrophysics
Publisher: EDP Science
Volume: 567
Subject Category
Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration
Report/Patent Number
GSFC-E-DAA-TN18467
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: ANR-06-BLAN-0421
CONTRACT_GRANT: ANR-2010-JCJC-0504-01
CONTRACT_GRANT: ANR-2010-JCJC-0501-01
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNG13PB64P
CONTRACT_GRANT: ANR-07-BLAN-0221
CONTRACT_GRANT: PERG06-GA-2009-256513
CONTRACT_GRANT: ANR-2010-JCJC-0504-01
CONTRACT_GRANT: PERG06-GA-2009-256513
CONTRACT_GRANT: ANR-10-BLAN-0505
CONTRACT_GRANT: Nucleus P10-022-F
CONTRACT_GRANT: EC-FP7 284405
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
Keywords
inner dust cavity
migrating jovian planet
thermochemical code
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