A CO-to-H 2 Ratio of ≈10 −5 toward the Herbig Ae Star HK Ori

  • Cauley P
  • France K
  • Herzceg G
  • et al.
1Citations
Citations of this article
7Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Measurements of gas mass in protoplanetary gas disks form the basis for estimating the conditions of planet formation. Among the most important constraints derived from disk diagnostics are the abundances of gas-phase species critical for understanding disk chemistry. Toward this end, we present direct line-of-sight measurements of H 2 and CO, employing UV absorption spectroscopy from Hubble Space Telescope Cosmic Origins Spectrograph to characterize disk composition, molecular excitation temperatures, and spatial distribution in the circumstellar material around the Herbig Ae stars HK Ori and T Ori. We observe strong CO (N(CO) = 10 15.5 cm −2 ; T rot (CO) = 19 K) and H 2 (N(H 2 ) = 10 20.34 cm −2 ; T rot (H 2 ) = 141 K) absorption toward HK Ori with a CO/H 2 ratio of (≡N(CO)/N(H 2 )) = × 10 −5 . These measurements place direct empirical constraints on the CO-to-H 2 conversion factor in the disk around a Herbig Ae star for the first time, although there is uncertainty concerning the exact viewing geometry of the disk. The spectra of T Ori show CO (N(CO) = 10 14.9 cm −2 ; T rot (CO) = 124 K) absorption. Interestingly, we do not detect any H 2 absorption toward this star (N(H 2 ) < 10 15.9 cm −2 ). We discuss a potential scenario for the detection of CO without H 2 , which deserves further investigation. The low abundance ratio measured around HK Ori suggests significant depletion of CO in the circumstellar gas, which conforms with the handful of other recent CO abundance measurements in protoplanetary disks.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Cauley, P. W., France, K., Herzceg, G. J., & Johns-Krull, C. M. (2021). A CO-to-H 2 Ratio of ≈10 −5 toward the Herbig Ae Star HK Ori. The Astronomical Journal, 161(5), 217. https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/abea21

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free