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Forbidden line diagnostics of photoevaporative disc winds

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, ISSN: 1365-2966, Vol: 496, Issue: 3, Page: 2932-2945
2020
  • 22
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 17
    Captures
  • 1
    Mentions
  • 0
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Citations
    22
  • Captures
    17
  • Mentions
    1
    • Blog Mentions
      1
      • Blog
        1

Most Recent Blog

Psst… Forbidden Secrets in Windy Protoplanetary Disks

This guest post was written by Lina Kimmig, an astrophysics student at the Institute for Theoretical Astrophysics in Heidelberg, Germany. Lina is crazy about exoplanets and protoplanetary disks. Currently, she is working on twisted disks in her Master’s thesis. At the end of 2021, she will start her PhD to further work in the field of protoplanetary disks. In her free time, Lina loves to ballroom

Article Description

Photoevaporation driven by high-energy radiation from the central star plays an important role in the evolution of protoplanetary discs. Photoevaporative winds have been unambiguously detected through blue-shifted emission lines, but their detailed properties remain uncertain. Here we present a new empirical approach to make observational predictions of these thermal winds, seeking to fill the gap between theory and observations. We use a self-similar model of an isothermal wind to compute line profiles of several characteristic emission lines (in particular the [Ne II] line at 12.81 μm, and optical forbidden lines such as [O I] 6300Åand [S II] 4068/4076 Å), studying how the lines are affected by parameters such as the gas temperature, disc inclinations, and density profile. Ourmodel successfully reproduces blue-shifted lines with vpeak ≲ 10 km s-1, which decrease with increasing disc inclination. The line widths increase with increasing disc inclinations and range from Δv ∼ 15 to 30 km s-1. The predicted blueshifts aremostly sensitive to the gas sound speed (and therefore the temperature). The observed [Ne II] line profiles are consistent with a thermalwind and point towards a relatively high sound speed, as expected for extreme-UV photoevaporation. However, the observed [OI] line profiles require lower temperatures, as expected in X-ray photoevaporation, and show a wider scatter that is difficult to reconcile with a single wind model; it seems likely that these lines trace different components of a multiphase wind.We also note that the spectral resolution of current observations remains an important limiting factor in these studies, and that higher resolution spectra are required if emission lines are to further our understanding of protoplanetary disc winds.

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