Title: The Cradle of Life:
1The Cradle of Life Proto-planetary Disks
Square Kilometer Array
Sean M. Dougherty (NRC) David J. Wilner (CfA)
Courtesy Geoff Bryden
2Why Cradle of Life?
- Recent discovery of extra-solar planets
- 120 exo-solar planets - many gas giants
- Are there other Earth-like planets?
- publicly enthralling, scientifically
philosophically important in 21st century -
- NASA Origins
- Kepler (2007) transit photometry
- SIM (2009) optical interferometer --
astrometry - TPF (2015) optical chronograph/ IR-nulling
interferometer -
- These are planet finders
- How common are Solar Systems like our own?
- Are terrestrial planets common?
- What accounts for the diversity of planetary
systems? -
-
3Why Cradle of Life? (cont)
- Relevance of Proto-planetary Disks -
proto-planetary gt enough gas to form giant
planets - - planet formation
- inner disk within 1AU of the central star
the habitable zone - Planet formation within 1 AU . The Cradle of
Life - - accretion physics
- Disks are Naturally multi-l Objects
- T,n,B. f(r,f,z) ? phenomena _at_ many
wavelengths - driver for JWST/ALMA/TMT, etc.
- And the SKA..
- Only instrument capable of imaging dust emission
within 1AU - - the birth of planets within 1AU
-
4Planet Building
- Observe young stellar systems to identify
- 1. physical processes
- grain growth, orbital migration of grains
- 2. signatures of planets in formation
- disk structure gaps, evolution
- There are large numbers (100s) of
proto-planetary disks at 140 pcsize scale of
regions relevant for planets lt 10 AU lt 70 mas - terrestrial planets lt 1AU lt 7 mas
-
5State-of-the-Art Disk Imaging
TW Hya _at_ 56 pc
Hubble Space Telescope optical scattered light
(Schneider et al. 2001)
VLA 7mm dust emission (Wilner et al. 2000)
6Example the DG TAU Proto-stellar System
- well-studied, very
- active, T Tauri star
- optical jet P.A. 226
- VLAPT at 7 mm
- sees inner dust disk,
- q 35 mas, DK 20
- Where is the star?
- What produces the
- asymmetry?
7Physical Models of Disk Structure
- Physical models now taking
- place of power law
- parameterizations
- self-consistent treatment of
- radiative and hydro-static
- equilibrium using radiative
- transfer
S(r)
T(r)
h(r)
e.g. Chiang Goldreich 1997, 99
DAlessio et al. 1997, 98 , 99...
Dullemond et al. 2000, 01, 02...
SED
DAlessio et al. 2001
8TW Hya an eVLA Simulation
- physical model of
- irradiated accretion
- disk adapted from
- Calvet et al. (2002)
- ApJ, 568, 1008
- VLA Pie Town
- configuration, 7 mm
- eVLA PT could
- image 4 AU radius
- hole (if it exists)
9Are Proto-planetary Gaps Detectable?
VLTI _at_ 10 mm
ALMA _at_ 700 mm
Hydro simulations of disk _at_ 140pc with an
embedded Jupiter-mass planet The gap lies 37 mas
(5.2 AU) from the star. To image within lt 4-5
AU, need longer wavelengths
Wolf et al. 2002
10Evidence for Grain Growth in Disks
- at long ls where tlt1,
- F kdust l-2 l-(b2)
- so radio/mm data provide
- direct measure of b
- diagnostic of grain characteristics
- (size, composition etc.)
- compact, spherical particles
- a ltlt l, b2
- pebbles, rocks, asteroids
- a gtgt l, b0
Beckwith and Sargent 1991
If F l-2 , then large grains? or compact
structure with tgt1?
11Example Large Grains in CQ Tau
- CQ Tau
- M 1.5 Mo, age 10 Myr
- spectral index
- 1 mm to 7 mm 2.4
- 7 mm - resolved by VLA
- models indicate
- t lt 1 for r gt 8 AU,
- R 200 AU (p1),
- kdust l-0.6
- most of dust mass in
- cm- size grains
Testi et al. 2003
12Next Generation High Resolution Imaging
TMT scattered light q 13 mas x (1.6 mm/30
m) (and infrared spectroscopy that probes inner
disks indirectly) ALMA dust emission q 13 mas
x (345 GHz/18 km) (molecular lines at lower
resolution) long ls (cm) dust emission gt low
dust opacity gt penetrate inner disks SKA q
1 mas x (24 GHz/2500 km) for rms 10 K at q 1
mas, need rms 20 nJy EVLAII q 7 mas x (24
GHz/360 km)
TW Hya
13Cradle of Life SKA specs.
- Terrestrial Planet formation within 1AU
- planets (gas giants) found within this radius
- several resolution elements to cover 1AU _at_
140pc - 1 mas gt 0.14 AU _at_ 140pc
- High frequency compromise between rapidly
increasing flux, increasing opacity (
resolution) - 20-30 GHz
- Imaging dust of 50-300 K.
- Continuum brightness sensitivity 10K
- For q 1 mas (2500 km _at_ 24 GHz), rms 10 nJy
gives 10K -
14SKA could play Unique Role in Disk Studies
- If capable at gt 20 GHz, SKA will have best
resolution/sensitivity - for imaging thermal emission.
-
- For direct detection of structure
- in disks induced by planets,
- sub-AU resolution is key.
- (synergy with other facilities)
- High angular resolution probes
- terrestrial planet region and
- enables following evolution
- over orbital timescales.
- Short centimeter wavelengths
- are critical for tracking grain growth from
sub-micron - interstellar size particles to pebbles.
Bate et al. 2003