Monday, February 11, 2013

1302.2111 (Stephen L. Skinner et al.)

X-ray Irradiation of the LkCa 15 Protoplanetary Disk    [PDF]

Stephen L. Skinner, Manuel Guedel
LkCa 15 in the Taurus star-forming region has recently gained attention as the first accreting T Tauri star likely to host a young protoplanet. High spatial resolution infrared observations have detected the suspected protoplanet within a dust-depleted inner gap of the LkCa 15 transition disk at a distance of 15 AU from the star. If this object's status as a protoplanet is confirmed, LkCa 15 will serve as a unique laboratory for constraining physical conditions within a planet-forming disk. Previous models of the LkCa 15 disk have accounted for disk heating by the stellar photosphere but have ignored the potential importance of X-ray ionization and heating. We report here the detection of LkCa 15 as a bright X-ray source with Chandra. The X-ray emission is characterized by a cool heavily-absorbed plasma component at kT_cool ~0.3 keV and a harder component at kT_hot ~5 keV. We use the observed X-ray properties to provide initial estimates of the X-ray ionization and heating rates within the tenuous inner disk. These estimates and the observed X-ray properties of LkCa 15 can be used as a starting point for developing more realistic disk models of this benchmark system.
View original: http://arxiv.org/abs/1302.2111

No comments:

Post a Comment