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Observing the gas component of circumplanetary disks around wide-orbit planet-mass companions in the (sub)mm regime

Authors :
N. Oberg
Christian Ginski
L. B. F. M. Waters
Carsten Dominik
W. F. Thi
G. A. Muro-Arena
Inga Kamp
Peter Woitke
Ch. Rab
University of St Andrews. School of Physics and Astronomy
University of St Andrews. St Andrews Centre for Exoplanet Science
Low Energy Astrophysics (API, FNWI)
Astronomy
Source :
Astronomy & Astrophysics, 624:A16. EDP Sciences, Astronomy and Astrophysics (0004-6361), 624, A16, Astronomy & astrophysics, 624(April 2019):A16. EDP Sciences
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
arXiv, 2019.

Abstract

Several detections of wide-orbit planet-mass/sub-stellar companions around young solar-like stars were reported in the last decade. The origin of those possible planets is still unclear but accretion tracers and VLT/SPHERE observations indicate that they are surrounded by circumplanetary material or even a circumplanetary disk. We want to investigate if the gas component of disks around wide-orbit companions is detectable with current and future (sub)mm telescopes and what constraints such gas observations can provide on the nature of the circumplanetary material and on the mass of the companion. We applied the radiation thermo-chemical disk code ProDiMo to model the dust and gas component of passive circumplanetary disks and produced realistic synthetic observables. We considered different companion properties, disk parameters and radiative environments and compared the resulting synthetic observables to telescope sensitivities and to existing dust observations. The main criterion for a successful detection is the size of the circumplanetary disk. At a distance of about 150 pc, a circumplanetary disk with an outer radius of about 10 au is detectable with ALMA in about 6 hours in optically thick CO lines. Other aspects such as the companion's luminosity, disk inclination and background radiation fields are also relevant and should be considered to optimize the observing strategy for detection experiments. For most of the known wide-orbit planet-mass companions, their maximum theoretical disk size of one third of the Hill radius would be sufficient to allow detection of CO lines. It is therefore feasible to detect their gas disks and constrain the mass of the companion through the kinematic signature. Even in the case of non-detections such observations will provide stringent constraints on disk size and gas mass, information crucial for formation theories.<br />Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in A&A

Details

ISSN :
14320746 and 00046361
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Astronomy & Astrophysics, 624:A16. EDP Sciences, Astronomy and Astrophysics (0004-6361), 624, A16, Astronomy & astrophysics, 624(April 2019):A16. EDP Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....afeab60bcea38d76478e8153002b7ea2
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1902.04096