Observability of photoevaporation signatures in the dust continuum emission of transition discs

Author:

Picogna Giovanni1ORCID,Schäfer Carolina1,Ercolano Barbara1,Rab Christian1ORCID,Franz Rafael1,Gárate Matías2

Affiliation:

1. Universitäts-Sternwarte, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München , Scheinerstraße 1, D-81679 München, Germany

2. Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie , Königstuhl 17, D-69117 Heidelberg, Germany

Abstract

ABSTRACT Photoevaporative disc winds play a key role in our understanding of circumstellar disc evolution, especially in the final stages, and they might affect the planet formation process and the final location of planets. The study of transition discs (i.e. discs with a central dust cavity) is central for our understanding of the photoevaporation process and disc dispersal. However, we need to distinguish cavities created by photoevaporation from those created by giant planets. Theoretical models are necessary to identify possible observational signatures of the two different processes, and models to find the differences between the two processes are still lacking. In this paper, we study a sample of transition discs obtained from radiation–hydrodynamic simulations of internally photoevaporated discs, and focus on the dust dynamics relevant for current Atacama Large Millimetre Array observations. We then compared our results with gaps opened by a super-Earth/giant planets, finding that the photoevaporated cavity steepness depends mildly on gap size, and it is similar to that of a ${1}\, {\rm M_J}$ planet. However, the dust density drops less rapidly inside the photoevaporated cavity compared to the planetary case due to the less efficient dust filtering. This effect is visible in the resulting spectral index, which shows a larger spectral index at the cavity edge and a shallower increase inside it with respect to the planetary case. The combination of cavity steepness and spectral index might reveal the true nature of transition discs.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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