Title: Grain Growth in Protoplanetary Disks: the SubMillimeter
1Grain Growth in Protoplanetary Disks the
(Sub)Millimeter
David J. Wilner Harvard-Smithsonian Center for
Astrophysics
Sep 11, 2006
From Dust to Planetesimals, Ringberg
2(Sub)Millimeter?
- longest observable ?s for dust 0.35 to gt1 mm
- vibrational dust emission is dominant mechanism
(thermal fluctuations in charge distribution) - sensitive to cold dust, Tlt10s of K
- low opacity, sample emission at all disk depths
- ? dependence of opacity diagnostic of dust
properties (e.g. growth to millimeter size) - no contrast issue with stellar photosphere
- major new facilities under construction ALMA,
eVLA
3(Sub)Millimeter Observables
- T Tauri, Herbig Ae stars (dlt150 pc, 1-10 Myr)
- gas rich, Keplerian disks (Mdiskltlt M)
- submm flux vs. wavelength, F ?-?, 2 lt ? lt 4
- spatially resolved brightness (interferometer)
4Basics of ?
- mass opacity (? gt0.1 mm) approx. power law
- normalization, power
law index ?, depend
on dust
properties - composition
- size distribution
- geometry
-
- (e.g. Draine 2006)
??-2
Adams et al. 1988, following Draine Lee 1984
5From ? to ?
- flux density emitted by an element dA
- if ?ltlt1 and h?ltltkT, then
- and ? simply related to ?
F ?-(2?)
6Disk Dust appears Different
- early (sub)mm obs disk lt?gt1 vs. ISM ?1.7
- (e.g Weintraub et al. 1989, Adams et al. 1990,
Beckwith et al. 1990, Beckwith Sargent 1991,
Mannings Emerson 1994)
Beckwith Sargent (1991)
?d(?-2)(1?)
0 1 2
7?1 Interpretations
- 1. changes in dust properties
- grain growth
- small, a ltlt ?/2? ? ?2
- large, a gtgt ?/2? ? ?0
- mm size, ?1
- ? ?-1 due to
- dust composition,
- particle geometry
- 2. optically thick emission
- F ?-2 (in part) ? ? gt (? - 2)
Pollack et al. 1994 mixture, compact,
segregated spheres, n(a) a-q,
q3.5
amax1 mm
amax10 cm
Calvet DAlessio 2001
8Dust Properties or Optical Depth?
- e.g. Herbig Ae stars UX Ori, CQ Tau
- ?1.1-7mm 2.00.3, 2.650.1
- ? 0 and large disk? any ? and small disk?
Testi et al. (2001)
9Resolve Ambiguity
- observe spatial distribution of sub(mm)
brightness - arcsecond scales require interferometry
- 1.3, 3 mm CARMA, PdBI, NMA ATCA, SMA
- 7 mm VLA (thanks to CONACyT, MPIfR, NSF)
- longer ? lever minimizes ? uncertainty,
probes larger dust more concern about ionized
gas
10Interferometer Studies
- combine fluxes, images, improved disk models
- TW Hya
- CQ Tau
- 7 (2) Herbig Ae stars
- 14 (10) Taurus PMS stars
- 10 (5) southern PMS stars
- 24 (20) Taurus/Oph PMS stars
- Calvet et al. 2002
- Testi et al. 2003
- Natta et al. 2004
- Rodmann et al. 2006
- Lommen et al. 2006
- Andrews Williams 2007
TBvs. disk radius at 0.4, 3, and 7 mm, from two
dust models of DAlessio et al. 2001
Calvet DAlessio 2001
11Grain Growth in TW Hya
- irradiated accretion disk model matches SED and
VLA (and SMA) intensities from 10s to Rout 200
AU - shallow (sub)mm slope requires amax gtgt 1 mm
- observed 7 mm low brightness requires ? ltlt 1
?0.7?0.1
Calvet et al. 2002
12Many (Barely) Resolved Disks
ATCA 3mm Lommen et al. 2006
SMA 0.87/1.3mm Andrews Williams
VLA/PdBI/OVRO Natta et al. 2004
VLA 7mm Rodmann et al. 2006
13Many More ? Determinations
- ?1 for many/most resolved disks
solid Lommen et al. 2006 dashed Rodmann et
al. 2006 dotted Natta et al. 2004
14Limitations/Complexity of ?
- ? is an average, for any dust model
- cannot disentangle all properties
- ?lt1 hard to avoid substantial mass fraction
aO(?)
amax ?
Natta Testi 2004
Natta Testi 2004
15TW Hya at 3.5 cm?
- disk model underpredicts 3.5 cm emission
- emission mechanism?
- ionized protostellar wind
- if Fcm?dMacc/dt, low by 103x
- spinning dust (Rafikov 2006)
- requires high (unrealistic) C
fraction in nanoparticles/PAHs - synchrotron
- X-rays not stellar activity dense, cool, and
depleted ?accretion (Stelzer Schmitt 2004) - thermal dust, ? ? const
F ?-2.6?0.1
16Grain Size Evolution
- theory growth, settling, destruction,
- depart from simple power law size distribution
- create midplane population of cm size
(timescale?)
Weidenschilling 1997
Dullemond Dominik 2005
17TW Hya Pebble Population
- 3.5 cm disk dust emission
- 1. not variable weeks to years
- 2. resolved at arcsec scale,
- brightness only 10 K
- 3. steep spectrum to 6 cm
Wilner et al. 2005
toy model small cm size grains
18Any ? Correlations?
- no trend of ? with stellar luminosity, mass, age
- tantalizing trends of ? with mid-ir growth,
settling indicators
? ?
Acke et al. 2004
??
Lommen et al. 2006
PPV Natta et al. 2006
19Remarks
- (sub)mm ?lt1 compelling evidence for growth
- most of original dust mass in mm/cm size
particles - no clear trends with stellar properties
- mm/cm sizes persist for Myrs
- competition between growth and destruction
- are the disks we can study in the (sub)mm the
ones that will never form planets? - probably not transition disks
PPV Natta, Testi, Calvet, Henning, Waters
Wilner, astro-ph/0602041
20Transition Disks Inner Holes
Spitzer IRS implies r24 AU hole ... we remain
skeptical of the existence of such a large
central gap 5 AU devoid of dust. -
Chiang Goldreich (1999)
Calvet et al. 2005
Wilner et al. 2006
21Next Generation (Sub)mm Facilities
- 10 to 100x better sensitivity, resolution, image
quality - dust emission structure at 0.1 to 0.01 arcsec
- precision (sub)mm spectral index maps
22End