Retrievals of Protoplanetary Disk Parameters using Thermochemical Models: I. Disk Gas Mass from Hydrogen Deuteride Spectroscopy
We discuss statistical relationships between the mass of protoplanetary disks and the hydrogen deuteride (HD) line emission and the dust spectral energy distribution (SED) determined using 3000 ProDiMo disk models. The models have 15 free parameters describing disk physical properties, the central s...
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Zusammenfassung: | We discuss statistical relationships between the mass of protoplanetary disks
and the hydrogen deuteride (HD) line emission and the dust spectral energy
distribution (SED) determined using 3000 ProDiMo disk models. The models have
15 free parameters describing disk physical properties, the central star, and
the local radiation field. The sampling of physical parameters is done using a
Monte Carlo approach to evaluate the probability density functions of
observables as a function of physical parameters. We find that the HD
fractional abundance is almost constant even though the UV flux varies by
several orders of magnitude. Probing the statistical relation between the
physical quantities and the HD flux, we find that low-mass (optically thin)
disks display a tight correlation between the average disk gas temperature and
HD line flux, while massive disks show no such correlation. We demonstrate that
the central star luminosity, disk size, dust size distribution, and HD flux may
be used to determine the disk gas mass to within a factor of three. We also
find that the far-IR and sub-mm/mm SEDs and the HD flux may serve as strong
constraints for determining the disk gas mass to within a factor of two. If the
HD lines are fully spectrally resolved ($R\gtrsim 1.5\times10^6, \Delta
v=0.2~\rm km\,s^{-1}$), the 56 $\mu$m and 112 $\mu$m HD line profiles alone may
constrain the disk gas mass to within a factor of two. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2310.16026 |