Protoplanetary disc surveys conducted with Atacama Large Millimetre Array (ALMA) are measuring disc radii in multiple star-forming regions. The disc radius is a fundamental quantity to diagnose whether discs undergo viscous spreading, discriminating between viscosity or angular momentum removal by winds as drivers of disc evolution. Observationally, however, the sub-mm continuum emission is dominated by the dust, which also drifts inwards, complicating, the picture. In this paper we investigate, using theoretical models of dust grain growth and radial drift, how the radii of dusty viscous protoplanetary discs evolve with time. Despite the existence of a sharp outer edge in the dust distribution, we rind that the radius enclosing most of the dust mass increases with time, closely following the evolution of the gas radius. This behaviour arises because, although dust: initially grows and drifts rapidly on to the star, the residual dust retained on-Myr time-scales is relatively well coupled to the gas. Observing the expansion of the dust disc requires using definitions based on high fractions of the disc:flux (e.g. 95 percent) and very long integrations with ALMA, because the dust grains in the outer part of the disc are small and have a low sub-mm opacity. We show that existing surveys lack the sensitivity to detect viscous spreading. The disc radii they measure do not trace the mass radius or the sharp outer edge in the dust distribution, but the outer limit of where the grains have significant sub-mm opacity. We predict that these observed radii should shrink with time.
Giovanni P Rosotti, Marco Tazzari, Richard A Booth, Leonardo Testi, Giuseppe Lodato, Cathie Clarke (2019). The time evolution of dusty protoplanetary disc radii: observed and physical radii differ. MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY, 486(4), 4829-4844 [10.1093/mnras/stz1190].
The time evolution of dusty protoplanetary disc radii: observed and physical radii differ
Leonardo Testi;
2019
Abstract
Protoplanetary disc surveys conducted with Atacama Large Millimetre Array (ALMA) are measuring disc radii in multiple star-forming regions. The disc radius is a fundamental quantity to diagnose whether discs undergo viscous spreading, discriminating between viscosity or angular momentum removal by winds as drivers of disc evolution. Observationally, however, the sub-mm continuum emission is dominated by the dust, which also drifts inwards, complicating, the picture. In this paper we investigate, using theoretical models of dust grain growth and radial drift, how the radii of dusty viscous protoplanetary discs evolve with time. Despite the existence of a sharp outer edge in the dust distribution, we rind that the radius enclosing most of the dust mass increases with time, closely following the evolution of the gas radius. This behaviour arises because, although dust: initially grows and drifts rapidly on to the star, the residual dust retained on-Myr time-scales is relatively well coupled to the gas. Observing the expansion of the dust disc requires using definitions based on high fractions of the disc:flux (e.g. 95 percent) and very long integrations with ALMA, because the dust grains in the outer part of the disc are small and have a low sub-mm opacity. We show that existing surveys lack the sensitivity to detect viscous spreading. The disc radii they measure do not trace the mass radius or the sharp outer edge in the dust distribution, but the outer limit of where the grains have significant sub-mm opacity. We predict that these observed radii should shrink with time.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.