4.7 Article

High-resolution submillimeter constraints on circumstellar disk structure

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 659, Issue 1, Pages 705-728

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/511741

Keywords

accretion; accretion disks; circumstellar matter; planetary systems : protoplanetary disks; solar system : formation; stars : pre-main-sequence

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We present a high spatial resolution submillimeter continuum survey of 24 circumstellar disks in the Taurus-Auriga and Ophiuchus-Scorpius star formation regions using the SMA. In the context of a simple model, we use broadband spectral energy distributions and submillimeter visibilities to derive constraints on some basic parameters that describe the structure of these disks. For the typical disk in the sample we infer a radial surface density distribution Sigma(r) proportional to r(-p) with a median p approximate to 0.5, although consideration of the systematic effects of some of our assumptions suggest that steeper distributions with p approximate to 1 are more reasonable. The distribution of the outer radii of these disks shows a distinct peak at R-d approximate to 200 AU, with only a few cases where the disk emission is completely unresolved. Based on these disk structure measurements, the mass accretion rates, and the typical spectral and spatial distributions of submillimeter emission, we show that the observations are in good agreement with similarity solutions for steady accretion disks that have a viscosity parameter alpha approximate to 0.01. We provide new estimates of the spectral dependence of the disk opacity kappa(nu) proportional to nu(beta) with a mean beta approximate to 1.0, corrected for optically thick emission. This typical value of beta is consistent with model predictions for the collisional growth of solids to millimeter-size scales in the outer disk. Although direct constraints on planet formation in these disks are not currently available, the extrapolated density distributions inferred here are substantially shallower than those calculated based on the solar system or extrasolar planets and typically used in planet formation models. It is possible that we are substantially underestimating disk densities due to an incomplete submillimeter opacity prescription.

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