4.7 Article

Hot organic molecules toward a young low-mass star: A look at inner disk chemistry

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 636, Issue 2, Pages L145-L148

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/500084

Keywords

infrared : ISM; ISM : individual (IRS 46); ISM : jets and outflows; ISM : molecules; planetary systems : protoplanetary disks; stars : formation

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Spitzer Space Telescope spectra of the low-mass young stellar object (YSO) IRS 46 (L-bol approximate to 0.6 L-circle dot) in Ophiuchus reveal strong vibration-rotation absorption bands of gaseous C2H2, HCN, and CO2. This is the only source out of a sample of similar to 100 YSOs that shows these features, and this is the first time that they are seen in the spectrum of a solar-mass YSO. Analysis of the Spitzer data combined with Keck L- and M- band spectra reveals excitation temperatures of greater than or similar to 350 K and abundances of 10(-6) to 10(-5) with respect to H 2, orders of magnitude higher than those found in cold clouds. In spite of this high abundance, the HCN line is barely detected with the J = 4 - 3 James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT), indicating a source diameter less than 13 AU. The (sub) millimeter continuum emission and the absence of scattered light in near-infrared images limit the mass and temperature of any remnant collapsing envelope to less than 0.01 M-circle dot and 100 K, respectively. This excludes a hot-core - type region as found in high-mass YSOs. The most plausible origin of this hot gas rich in organic molecules is in the inner (< 6 AU radius) region of the disk around IRS 46, either the disk itself or a disk wind. A nearly edge-on two-dimensional disk model fits the spectral energy distribution (SED) and gives a column of dense warm gas along the line of sight that is consistent with the absorption data. These data illustrate the unique potential of high-resolution infrared spectroscopy to probe the organic chemistry, gas temperatures, and gas kinematics in the planet-forming zones close to a young star.

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