SIMBAD references

2018A&A...617A..28S - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 617A, 28-28 (2018/9-1)

Chemistry in disks. XI. Sulfur-bearing species as tracers of protoplanetary disk physics and chemistry: the DM Tau case.

SEMENOV D., FAVRE C., FEDELE D., GUILLOTEAU S., TEAGUE R., HENNING T., DUTREY A., CHAPILLON E., HERSANT F. and PIETU V.

Abstract (from CDS):


Context. Several sulfur-bearing molecules are observed in the interstellar medium and in comets, in strong contrast to protoplanetary disks where only CS, H2CS, and SO have been detected so far.
Aims. We combine observations and chemical models to constrain the sulfur abundances and their sensitivity to physical and chemical conditions in the DM Tau protoplanetary disk.
Methods. We obtained 0.5'' Atacama Large Millimeter Array observations of DM Tau in Bands 4 and 6 in lines of CS, SO, SO2, OCS, CCS, H2CS, and H2S, achieving a ∼5mJy sensitivity. Using the non-Local Thermodynamical Equilibrium radiative transfer code RADEX and the forward-modeling tool DiskFit, disk-averaged CS column densities and upper limits for the other species were derived.
Results. Only CS was detected with a derived column density of ∼2-6x1012cm–2. We report a first tentative detection of SO2 in DM Tau. The upper limits range between ∼1011 and 1014cm–2 for the other S-bearing species. The best-fit chemical model matching these values requires a gas-phase C/O ratio of ≥1 at r≥50-100au. With chemical modeling we demonstrate that sulfur-bearing species could be robust tracers of the gas-phase C/O ratio, surface reaction rates, grain size and UV intensities.
Conclusions. The lack of detections of a variety of sulfur-bearing molecules in DM Tau other than CS implies a dearth of reactive sulfur in the gas phase, either through efficient freeze-out or because most of the elemental sulfur is in other large species, as found in comets. The inferred high CS/SO and CS/SO2 ratios require a non-solar C/O gas-phase ratio of ≥1, consistent with the recent observations of hydrocarbon rings in DM Tau. The stronger depletion of oxygen-bearing S-species compared to CS is likely linked to the low observed abundances of gaseous water in DM Tau and points to a removal mechanism of oxygen from the gas.

Abstract Copyright: © ESO 2018

Journal keyword(s): astrochemistry - protoplanetary disks - radio lines: planetary systems - radio lines: stars - circumstellar matter

Simbad objects: 14

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