The Effects of Protostellar Disk Turbulence on CO Emission Lines: A Comparison Study of Disks with Constant CO Abundance versus Chemically Evolving Disks

被引:13
作者
Yu, Mo [1 ]
Evans, Neal J., II [1 ,2 ]
Dodson-Robinson, Sarah E. [3 ]
Willacy, Karen [4 ]
Turner, Neal J. [4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Texas Austin, Astron Dept, 2515 Speedway,Stop C1400, Austin, TX 78712 USA
[2] Korea Astron & Space Sci Inst, 776 Daedeokdae Ro, Daejeon 34055, South Korea
[3] Univ Delaware, Dept Phys & Astron, 217 Sharp Lab, Newark, DE 19716 USA
[4] CALTECH, Jet Prop Lab, Mail Stop 169-506,4800 Oak Grove Dr, Pasadena, CA 91109 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
accretion; accretion disks; astrochemistry; line: profiles; protoplanetary disks; turbulence; PROTOPLANETARY DISKS; INSTABILITY; FRAGMENTATION; SIMULATIONS; COAGULATION; PHYSICS;
D O I
10.3847/1538-4357/aa9217
中图分类号
P1 [天文学];
学科分类号
0704 ;
摘要
Turbulence is the leading candidate for angular momentum transport in protoplanetary disks and therefore influences disk lifetimes and planet formation timescales. However, the turbulent properties of protoplanetary disks are poorly constrained observationally. Recent studies have found turbulent speeds smaller than what fullydeveloped MRI would produce (Flaherty et al.). However, existing studies assumed a constant CO/H-2 ratio of 10(-4) in locations where CO is not frozen-out or photo-dissociated. Our previous studies of evolving disk chemistry indicate that CO is depleted by incorporation into complex organic molecules well inside the freeze-out radius of CO. We consider the effects of this chemical depletion on measurements of turbulence. Simon et al. suggested that the ratio of the peak line flux to the flux at line center of the CO J = 3-2 transition is a reasonable diagnostic of turbulence, so we focus on that metric, while adding some analysis of the more complex effects on spatial distribution. We simulate the emission lines of CO based on chemical evolution models presented in Yu et al., and find that the peak-to-trough ratio changes as a function of time as CO is destroyed. Specifically, a CO-depleted disk with high turbulent velocity mimics the peak-to-trough ratios of a non-CO-depleted disk with lower turbulent velocity. We suggest that disk observers and modelers take into account the possibility of CO depletion when using line profiles or peak-to-trough ratios to constrain the degree of turbulence in disks. Assuming that CO/H-2 = 10(-4) at all disk radii can lead to underestimates of turbulent speeds in the disk by at least 0.2 km s(-1).
引用
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页数:11
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