4.6 Article

A 10 μm spectroscopic survey of Herbig Ae star disks:: Grain growth and crystallization

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 437, Issue 1, Pages 189-208

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20042339

Keywords

stars : circumstellar matter; stars : pre-main sequence; infrared : ISM; ISM : lines and bands; dust, extinction

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We present spectroscopic observations of a large sample of Herbig Ae stars in the 10 mu m spectral region. We perform compositional fits of the spectra based on properties of homogeneous as well as inhomogeneous spherical particles, and derive the mineralogy and typical grain sizes of the dust responsible for the 10 mu m emission. Several trends are reported that can constrain theoretical models of dust processing in these systems: i) none of the sources consists of fully pristine dust comparable to that found in the interstellar medium; ii) all sources with a high fraction of crystalline silicates are dominated by large grains; iii) the disks around more massive stars ( M greater than or similar to 2.5 M-circle dot, L greater than or similar to 60 L-circle dot) have a higher fraction of crystalline silicates than those around lower mass stars, iv) in the subset of lower mass stars ( M less than or similar to 2.5 M-circle dot) there is no correlation between stellar parameters and the derived crystallinity of the dust. The correlation between the shape and strength of the 10 micron silicate feature reported by van Boekel et al. (2003) is reconfirmed with this larger sample. The evidence presented in this paper is combined with that of other studies to present a likely scenario of dust processing in Herbig Ae systems. We conclude that the present data favour a scenario in which the crystalline silicates are produced in the innermost regions of the disk, close to the star, and transported outward to the regions where they can be detected by means of 10 micron spectroscopy. Additionally, we conclude that the final crystallinity of these disks is reached very soon after active accretion has stopped.

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