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Molecules with ALMA at Planet-forming Scales (MAPS) III: Characteristics of Radial Chemical Substructures

Authors :
Law, Charles J.
Loomis, Ryan A.
Teague, Richard
Öberg, Karin I.
Czekala, Ian
Andrews, Sean M.
Huang, Jane
Aikawa, Yuri
Alarcón, Felipe
Bae, Jaehan
Bergin, Edwin A.
Bergner, Jennifer B.
Boehler, Yann
Booth, Alice S.
Bosman, Arthur D.
Calahan, Jenny K.
Cataldi, Gianni
Cleeves, L. Ilsedore
Furuya, Kenji
Guzmán, Viviana V.
Ilee, John D.
Gal, Romane Le
Liu, Yao
Long, Feng
Ménard, François
Nomura, Hideko
Qi, Chunhua
Schwarz, Kamber R.
Sierra, Anibal
Tsukagoshi, Takashi
Yamato, Yoshihide
Hoff, Merel L. R. van't
Walsh, Catherine
Wilner, David J.
Zhang, Ke
Law, Charles J.
Loomis, Ryan A.
Teague, Richard
Öberg, Karin I.
Czekala, Ian
Andrews, Sean M.
Huang, Jane
Aikawa, Yuri
Alarcón, Felipe
Bae, Jaehan
Bergin, Edwin A.
Bergner, Jennifer B.
Boehler, Yann
Booth, Alice S.
Bosman, Arthur D.
Calahan, Jenny K.
Cataldi, Gianni
Cleeves, L. Ilsedore
Furuya, Kenji
Guzmán, Viviana V.
Ilee, John D.
Gal, Romane Le
Liu, Yao
Long, Feng
Ménard, François
Nomura, Hideko
Qi, Chunhua
Schwarz, Kamber R.
Sierra, Anibal
Tsukagoshi, Takashi
Yamato, Yoshihide
Hoff, Merel L. R. van't
Walsh, Catherine
Wilner, David J.
Zhang, Ke
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The Molecules with ALMA at Planet-forming Scales (MAPS) Large Program provides a detailed, high resolution (${\sim}$10-20 au) view of molecular line emission in five protoplanetary disks at spatial scales relevant for planet formation. Here, we present a systematic analysis of chemical substructures in 18 molecular lines toward the MAPS sources: IM Lup, GM Aur, AS 209, HD 163296, and MWC 480. We identify more than 200 chemical substructures, which are found at nearly all radii where line emission is detected. A wide diversity of radial morphologies - including rings, gaps, and plateaus - is observed both within each disk and across the MAPS sample. This diversity in line emission profiles is also present in the innermost 50 au. Overall, this suggests that planets form in varied chemical environments both across disks and at different radii within the same disk. Interior to 150 au, the majority of chemical substructures across the MAPS disks are spatially coincident with substructures in the millimeter continuum, indicative of physical and chemical links between the disk midplane and warm, elevated molecular emission layers. Some chemical substructures in the inner disk and most chemical substructures exterior to 150 au cannot be directly linked to dust substructure, however, which indicates that there are also other causes of chemical substructures, such as snowlines, gradients in UV photon fluxes, ionization, and radially-varying elemental ratios. This implies that chemical substructures could be developed into powerful probes of different disk characteristics, in addition to influencing the environments within which planets assemble. This paper is part of the MAPS special issue of the Astrophysical Journal Supplement.<br />Comment: 62 pages, 31 figures, accepted for publication in ApJS, MAPS cross-references updated, corrected Figure 21, updated gas disk sizes (Table 2, Figures 15-16) from associated Erratum

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1363552266
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847.1538-4365.ac1434