|
JCMT Newsletter No. 20 (TW Hya)
Detection of DCO+ in the
TW Hya circumstellar disk
Ewine van Dishoeck, Wing-Fai Thi &
Gerd-Jan van Zadelhoff
Leiden Observatory, The Netherlands
The chemical composition of disks around pre-main sequence stars is an
active topic of research, not only because disks provide the material from
which future planetary systems are made, but also because molecules are excellent
probes of the physical processes in disks. Molecules other than CO are only
just starting to be revealed in disks (e.g., Dutrey et al. 1997, A&A
317, L55; Kastner et al. 1997, Science 277, 67; Qi 2001, PhD thesis Caltech).
Most of these studies focus on the lower rotational transitions of the molecules.
In late 1998, our group started a JCMT program using the new dual polarization
receiver B3 to search for high frequency transitions. In disks, the densities
are sufficiently high (106-108 cm-3) that
the higher-J transitions are at least as strong as the lower-J lines. Moreover,
the beam is smaller at high frequencies, reducing the beam dilution of the
emission.
During our first run, we succeeded in detecting several lines at the level
of TA*~0.05-0.2 K in about 2 hours of telescope time
each, testifying to the excellent performance of receiver B3. Previous studies
on other telescopes often required almost an entire night of integration
per line. We subsequently pursued the project looking for other molecules,
the results of which will be published in Thi et al. (2003, submitted).
Of particular interest is the first detection of the DCO+
ion in a circumstellar disk (see Figure). The DCO+ J=5-4 line
at 360.169 GHz was detected, together with the HCO+ and H13CO+
J=4-3 lines at 356.734 and 346.998 GHz, in the disk around the isolated T
Tauri star TW Hya. This is one of the nearest T Tauri stars at a distance
of only 56 pc and has an age of 7-15 Myr, somewhat older than most classical
T Tauri stars. The disk has a (gas + dust) mass of ~0.02 M_Sun and a size
of ~200 AU, corresponding to a 3.6'' radius at 56 pc. Because the disk is
seen nearly face-on, the molecular lines do not show the characteristic profiles
of a rotating disk but are single peaked.
JCMT detection of the DCO+ J=5-4 line, together with
the HCO+ J=4-3 and H13CO+ J=4-3 lines, in the disk around the
pre-main sequence star TW Hya. The H13CO+ and DCO+ spectra have
been shifted by -0.15 and -0.3 K, respectively, for clarity. The
near-infrared scattered light HST images by Weinberger et al. (2002,
ApJ 566, 409) are shown on the left.
The three lines allow an accurate value of the DCO+/HCO+
ratio of 0.035+-0.015 to be determined. This value for the TW Hya disk is
close to that found in cold pre-stellar cores but somewhat higher than that
measured in the envelope around the low-mass protostar IRAS 16293-2422 which
has started to heat its surroundings. It is also close to the DCN/HCN ratio
obtained for pristine cometary material in the jet of comet Hale-Bopp (Blake
et al. 1999, Nature 398, 213).
Deuterated molecules are excellent probes of the temperature history of
interstellar and circumstellar gas. It is well known that the abundances
of deuterated molecules in cold regions are enhanced by orders of magnitude
over the elemental [D]/[H] abundance ratio of 1.5 x 10-5 through
a process called fractionation: at temperatures below ~50 K, the H3+
+ HD -> H2D+ + H2 reaction is driven
strongly in the forward direction. H2D+ can subsequently
transfer a deuteron to the abundant CO molecule, leading to enhanced DCO+.
Moreover, the DCO+/HCO+ ratio is increased if the
main destroyer of H3+, i.e. CO, is depleted onto grains.
Thus, the DCO+/HCO+ ratio traces both low temperatures
and the level of depletion. The observed DCO+/HCO+
of 0.035 is consistent with theoretical models of flaring disks of Aikawa
et al. (2002, A&A 386, 622) which consider gas-phase fractionation processes
within a realistic 2-D temperature distribution and which include the effects
of freeze-out onto grains. Most of the emission is found to arise from an
intermediate layer of the disk, where temperatures are 20-30 K and densities
at least 106 cm-3.
The similarity of the deuterium fractionation ratios in cold clouds, disks
and pristine cometary material suggests that the gas spends most of its lifetime
at low temperatures and is incorporated in disks before the envelope is heated,
i.e., before the class I stage. Alternatively, the ratio may be reset in
disks by low-temperature gas-phase chemistry. Searches for other deuterated
molecules which are likely incorporated as ices (e.g., CH3OH)
can distinguish these scenarios. An exciting future prospect is to probe
the D/H ratio down to planet-forming regions with ALMA.
back to:> Printable Newsletter Index
back to:> Newsletter Index
Ewine van Dishoeck -
Leiden
|