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Ge/Ay133 sk Structure and Spectral Energy Distributions (SEDs)

Ge/Ay133

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Disk Structure and Spectral Energy Distributions (SEDs). Ge/Ay133. How are stars and planets made?. B68. B68. HH30. outflow. outflow. x1000 in scale. infall. BVI. JHK. Cloud collapse. Rotating disk. HD 141569. Mature solar system. Planet formation. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Ge/Ay133

Ge/Ay133

Disk Structure and Spectral Energy Distributions (SEDs)

Page 2: Ge/Ay133

Cloud collapse Rotating disk

infall

outflow

Planet formationMature solar system

x1000 in scale

Adapted from McCaughrean

How are stars and planets made?

outflowB68 HH30

HD 141569

BVIJHK

B68

Page 3: Ge/Ay133

Disks are thus critical, how can we study them?

#1 – Silhouette Disks

Only works for H II regions on the ‘front side’ of a cloud!

Page 4: Ge/Ay133

Age →

#2 – Edge-on Disks

Highly informative, but also rare!

Page 5: Ge/Ay133

While edge-on disks provide a natural coronograph, …

more generally, need special circumstances for detection.

AU Mic, Keck

HD 141569A, HST

Page 6: Ge/Ay133

Remember, disks are small:

1 A.U. = 7 milli-arcseconds for D=140 pc (Taurus, Ophichus)

Angular momentum budget: For a MMSN mass profile Keplerian disk of radius R,

J~(3x1020 cm2/s)(R/100 AU)1/2

Page 7: Ge/Ay133

Imaging surveys/unresolved photometry rather easier. What do such surveys tell us?

R=MIPS1 G=IRAC2 B=IRAC1 in Serpens

VV Ser

Blue=main sequence starRed =protostar/AGB star

Spitzer

Page 8: Ge/Ay133

Characterizing large disk samples? SED Models:

IR disk surface within several 0.1 – several tens of AU(sub)mm disk surface at large radii, disk interior. What determines disk properties (radius, flaring, T)?

G.J. vanZadelhoff2002

Chiang &Goldreich 1997

HH 30

Page 9: Ge/Ay133

Two different limits: Accretion-dominated vs. Passive

How hot do accretion disks get? At the very least, infalling material must dissipate an energy of order (GM*/Rdisk) per unit mass. Balance this against thermal radiation: (GM*/Rdisk)(Mdisk)~2Rdisk

2T4·where accretion timescale. Numerically,

T~(500 K)(1 AU/Rdisk)3/4

for 105 yr and a solar mass star.

Thus, more massive and/or faster evolving disks are hotter. Notice the different vertical temperature structure for more realistic models.

Page 10: Ge/Ay133

Passive Disks: The SHAPE is critical

If the central stellar mass dominates, the “vertical” acceleration at a distance R and height above the midplane z is g=geff ≈ (GM*/R3)·z = ·zwhere =(vK/R)=the Keplerian angular vel. For an ideal gas, the sound speed c is simply c=(RT)1/2 (R=ideal gas constant). From the equation of hydrostatic equilibrium dP/dz=-geff=-z=-(P/RT)z=-P(/c)2z

For a vertically isothermal disk this gives P = P0exp(-z2/H2) ,Where the scale height H=c/For a sound speed of 1 km/s and R~10 km/s, H/R=(sound speed)/(Keplerian vel.)~0.1. More quantitative models give (a=R):

Page 11: Ge/Ay133

The simplest model: Blackbody disks

The first disk SED models assumed a flat disk geometry and that the disk radiated as a perfect blackbody. In this limit, the long wavelength tail has F

Only a few disks obeyed this relationship, most showed much larger fluxes at longer wavelengths.

The solution, as first recognized by Kenyon & Hartmann (1987, ApJ, 323, 714), was that actual disks are flared as derived in the slides above. The increased flaring with distance permits the disk to intercept more light from the star and re-radiate it in the far-IR.

Page 12: Ge/Ay133

Somewhat more realistic: Two layer disk models

Chiang & Goldreich 1997, ApJ, 490, 368

While still not fully self-consistent, a rather better two-layer disk model was developed by Eugene Chiang for his thesis. The basic idea is that the stellar light is absorbed by the surface layers of the disk that are optically thin to re-radiated infrared energy from grains. This approach w/flared disks provides a good fit to most observed SEDs.

Page 13: Ge/Ay133

Next step: Include grain model opacities

Predicts silicate emission bandsfor the SiO stretchingand bending modesat 10/18 m.

The grains in disk surfaces are not perfect black- or greybodies, but instead have wavelength dependent emissivities.

Page 14: Ge/Ay133

Grain Emission/Growth in Disk Surface Layers10 m band 20 m band

Models

Data

Kessler-Silacci et al. 2006, ApJ

Page 15: Ge/Ay133

Warning: Recent data suggest complex disk atmospheres

See water, organics. How do such species survive near the disk surface? Transport?

Many disks display intense molecular emission even at R=600 (Spitzer IRS)!

Page 16: Ge/Ay133

How unique are these models?

Nearly all are degenerate for <30 m.

Page 17: Ge/Ay133

How bad are these model degeneracies?

Can be broken with resolved images at longer wavelengths, as we’ll see next time.

Bad! Note that for these two limiting cases the disk size differs by a factor of two, and the masses by a factor of nearly six!

Page 18: Ge/Ay133

How do we know how old pre-main sequence stars are?

Old clusters `dated’ with turn-off stars.

Young stars contract to main sequence, need accurate data on M, L, T along with * models.

← Mass

← T

ime