ArXiv TLDR

Diverse dust vertical height and settling strength conditions in protoplanetary discs

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2605.06904

Juanita Antilen, Paola Pinilla, Dafa Li, Marion Villenave, Anibal Sierra + 3 more

astro-ph.EP

TLDR

Modeling ALMA data from six protoplanetary discs reveals diverse dust vertical heights and settling strengths, indicating current models need refinement.

Key contributions

  • Modeled ALMA continuum substructures of six highly inclined protoplanetary discs using radiative transfer simulations.
  • Revealed diverse millimetre dust vertical heights across the sample, ranging from very thin to vertically extended discs.
  • Identified input dust opacities as a source of model degeneracy and found diverse dust settling strengths.
  • Demonstrated that models fitting midplane mm dust cannot reproduce small dust in upper layers, requiring complex models.

Why it matters

Understanding dust settling is crucial for planet formation. This paper constrains dust vertical heights and settling strengths in protoplanetary discs. It reveals current model limitations, emphasizing the need for more sophisticated approaches to accurately describe dust evolution.

Original Abstract

The settling of dust particles plays a critical role in the growth and dynamics of dust grains. We performed a detailed modeling of the ALMA continuum substructures for six highly inclined protoplanetary discs using radiative transfer simulations, to constrain the vertical height of millimetre dust grains and the settling strength. Our modeling results are a very thin millimetre dust disc in T Cha ($\text{h}_{\text{dust}}<$ 0.1 au throughout the disc), a vertically extended dust disc in DoAr 25 ($\text{h}_{\text{dust}}$ of $\sim$ 4.7 au at 140 au) and tentatively a thin disc in MY Lup ($\text{h}_{\text{dust}}<$ 0.5 au at 70 au). From lower resolution observations we found a very thin disc for PDS 111 ($\text{h}_{\text{dust}}<$ 0.1 au throughout the disc) and a more vertically extended millimetre dust disc in V409 Tau ($\text{h}_{\text{dust}}$ of $\sim$ 1.3 au at 35 au). We could not measure the vertical height in the asymmetric disc of RY Lup. We also found that the input dust opacities are a source of degeneracy in our models. Our tentative results, assuming the Ricci dust opacities, point to a diverse settling strength in our sample and possible radial variations. We also compared the models that best fit the ALMA data with the SPHERE data to test if they can reproduce the vertical distribution of small dust grains. This comparison suggests that models that reproduce the dust density distribution in the midplane cannot reproduce the distribution of small dust grains in the upper layers, reinforcing the need for more complex models.

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