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Molecules with ALMA at Planet-forming Scales (MAPS) I: Program Overview and Highlights

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

Abstract

Planets form and obtain their compositions in dust and gas-rich disks around young stars, and the outcome of this process is intimately linked to the disk chemical properties. The distributions of molecules across disks regulate the elemental compositions of planets, including C/N/O/S ratios and metallicity (O/H and C/H), as well as access to water and prebiotically relevant organics. Emission from molecules also encodes information on disk ionization levels, temperature structures, kinematics, and gas surface densities, which are all key ingredients of disk evolution and planet formation models. The Molecules with ALMA at Planet-forming Scales (MAPS) ALMA Large Program was designed to expand our understanding of the chemistry of planet formation by exploring disk chemical structures down to 10 au scales. The MAPS program focuses on five disks - around IM Lup, GM Aur, AS 209, HD 163296, and MWC 480 - in which dust substructures are detected and planet formation appears to be ongoing. We observed these disks in 4 spectral setups, which together cover ~50 lines from over 20 different species. This paper introduces the ApJS MAPS Special Issue by presenting an overview of the program motivation, disk sample, observational details, and calibration strategy. We also highlight key results, including discoveries of links between dust, gas, and chemical sub-structures, large reservoirs of nitriles and other organics in the inner disk regions, and elevated C/O ratios across most disks. We discuss how this collection of results is reshaping our view of the chemistry of planet formation.<br />Comment: Accepted for publication in the ApJS MAPS Special Issue. v2 has updated MAPS references and a correction to Fig. 3

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2109.06268
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4365/ac1432