论文标题
多波长连续大小的原球盘:缩放关系以及对谷物生长和径向漂移的影响
Multi-wavelength continuum sizes of protoplanetary discs: scaling relations and implications for grain growth and radial drift
论文作者
论文摘要
我们分析了狼疮恒星形成区域中26个最亮的原球圆盘的空间分析的0.9、1.3和3.1 mm的ALMA观测值。我们通过以均匀的方式拟合干涉可见性来表征盘多波长亮度曲线,并在三个波长,光谱指数曲线和光学深度估计值中获得有效的圆盘大小。我们报告了三个基本发现:首先,毫米连续体的大小 - 在0.9 mm处观察到的光度关系在1.3毫米处也有相同的斜率,并且在3.1 mm处具有较陡的斜率,确认该在更长波长的发射量变得越来越薄。其次,当在3.1 mm处观察到,圆盘似乎仅比在0.9 mm处观察到的圆盘小9%,这与尘埃演化模型的张力相张力,这预测了鲜明的差异。第三,通过使用一个简单的参数盘模型将测量样品进行转发模型,我们发现整个圆盘中大谷物($ a_ \ mathrm {max}> 1 $ mm)的存在是所有磁盘的最喜欢的解释,因为它同时重现了它们的频谱指数,光学的深度,光度,光泽度,光泽度和0.9-1.9-1.3-1-3-1-3-1。我们还发现,可以通过光学厚,未分辨的,由MM大小的晶粒制成的,具有高散射反照率的光学厚,未解决的子结构来替代观测。
We analyse spatially resolved ALMA observations at 0.9, 1.3, and 3.1 mm for the 26 brightest protoplanetary discs in the Lupus star-forming region. We characterise the discs multi-wavelength brightness profiles by fitting the interferometric visibilities in a homogeneous way, obtaining effective disc sizes at the three wavelengths, spectral index profiles and optical depth estimates. We report three fundamental discoveries: first, the millimeter continuum size - luminosity relation already observed at 0.9 mm is also present at 1.3 mm with an identical slope, and at 3.1 mm with a steeper slope, confirming that emission at longer wavelengths becomes increasingly optically thin. Second, when observed at 3.1 mm the discs appear to be only 9% smaller than when observed at 0.9 mm, in tension with models of dust evolution which predict a starker difference. Third, by forward modelling the sample of measurements with a simple parametric disc model, we find that the presence of large grains ($a_\mathrm{max}>1 $mm) throughout the discs is the most favoured explanation for all discs as it reproduces simultaneously their spectral indices, optical depth, luminosity, and radial extent in the 0.9-1.3 mm wavelength range. We also find that the observations can be alternatively interpreted with the discs being dominated by optically thick, unresolved, substructures made of mm-sized grains with a high scattering albedo.