GASPS -a Herschel survey of gas and dust in protoplanetary disks: summary and initial statistics
Article
Article Title | GASPS -a Herschel survey of gas and dust in protoplanetary disks: summary and initial statistics |
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ERA Journal ID | 1082 |
Article Category | Article |
Authors | Dent, W. R. F. (Author), Thi, W. F. (Author), Kamp, I. (Author), Williams, J. P. (Author), Menard, F. (Author), Andrews, I. (Author), Ardila, D. (Author), Aresu, G. (Author), Augereau, J. C. (Author), Barrado Y Navascues, D. (Author), Brittain, S. (Author), Carmona, A. (Author), Ciardi, D. (Author), Danchi, W. (Author), Donaldson, J. (Author), Duchene, G. (Author), Eiroa, C. (Author), Fedele, D. (Author), Grady, C. (Author), De Gregorio-Molsalvo, I. (Author), Howard, C. (Author), Huelamo, N. (Author), Krivov, A. (Author), Lebreton, J. (Author), Liseau, R. (Author), Martin-Zaidi, C. (Author), Mathews, G. (Author), Meeus, G. (Author), Mendigutia, I. (Author), Montesinos, B. (Author), Morales-Calderon, M. (Author), Mora, A. (Author), Nomura, H. (Author), Pantin, E. (Author), Pascucci, I. (Author), Phillips, N. (Author), Pinte, C. (Author), Podio, L. (Author), Ramsay, S. K. (Author), Riaz, B. (Author), Riviere-Marichalar, P. (Author), Roberge, A. (Author), Sandell, G. (Author), Solano, E. (Author), Tilling, I. (Author), Torrelles, J. M. (Author), Vandenbusche, B. (Author), Vicente, S. (Author), White, G. J. (Author) and Woitke, P. (Author) |
Journal Title | Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific |
Journal Citation | 125 (927), pp. 477-505 |
Number of Pages | 28 |
Year | 2013 |
Publisher | IOP Publishing |
Place of Publication | United States |
ISSN | 0004-6280 |
1538-3873 | |
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) | https://doi.org/10.1086/670826 |
Web Address (URL) | http://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1086/670826 |
Abstract | We describe a large-scale far-infrared line and continuum survey of protoplanetary disk through to young debris disk systems carried out using the ACS instrument on the Herschel Space Observatory. This Open Time Key program, known as GASPS (Gas Survey of Protoplanetary Systems), targeted ~250 young stars in narrow wavelength regions covering the [OI] fine structure line at 63 μm the brightest far-infrared line in such objects. A subset of the brightest targets were also surveyed in [OI]145 μm, [CII] at 157 μm, as well as several transitions of H2O and high-excitation CO lines at selected wavelengths between 78 and 180 μm. Additionally, GASPS included continuum photometry at 70, 100 and 160 μm, around the peak of the dust emission. The targets were SED Class II- III T Tauri stars and debris disks from seven nearby young associations, along with a comparable sample of isolated Herbig AeBe stars. The aim was to study the global gas and dust content in a wide sample of circumstellar disks, combining the results with models in a systematic way. In this overview paper we review the scientific aims, target selection and observing strategy of the program. We summarise some of the initial results, showing line identifications, listing the detections, and giving a first statistical study of line detectability. The [OI] line at 63 μm was the brightest line seen in almost all objects, by a factor of ~10. Overall [OI]63 μm detection rates were 49%, with 100% of HAeBe stars and 43% of T Tauri stars detected. A comparison with published disk dust masses (derived mainly from sub-mm continuum, assuming standard values of the mm mass opacity) shows a dust mass threshold for [OI] 63 μm detection of ~105 Mȯ. Normalising to a distance of 140 pc, 84% of objects with dust masses ≥105 Mȯ can be detected in this line in the present survey; 32% of those of mass 106-105 Mȯ, and only a very small number of unusual objects with lower masses can be detected. This is consistent with models with a moderate UV excess and disk flaring. For a given disk mass, [OI] detectability is lower forM stars compared with earlier spectral types. Both the continuum and line emission was, in most systems, spatially and spectrally unresolved and centred on the star, suggesting that emission in most cases was from the disk. Approximately 10 objects showed resolved emission, most likely from outflows. In the GASPS sample, [OI] detection rates in T Tauri associations in the 0.3-4 Myr age range were ~50%. For each association in the 5-20 Myr age range, ~2 stars remain detectable in [OI]63 μm, and no systems were detected in associations with age >20 Myr. Comparing with the total number of young stars in each association, and assuming a ISM-like gas/dust ratio, this indicates that ~18% of stars retain a gas-rich disk of total mass ~1 MJupiter for 1-4 Myr, 1-7% keep such disks for 5-10 Myr, but none are detected beyond 10-20 Myr. The brightest [OI] objects from GASPS were also observed in [OI]145 μm, [CII]157 μm and CO J 1/4 18 17, with detection rates of 20-40%. Detection of the [CII] line was not correlated with disk mass, suggesting it arises more commonly from a compact remnant envelope. |
Keywords | Herschel Space Observatory; disk systems; dust |
Contains Sensitive Content | Does not contain sensitive content |
ANZSRC Field of Research 2020 | 519999. Other physical sciences not elsewhere classified |
Public Notes | Files associated with this item cannot be displayed due to copyright restrictions. |
Institution of Origin | University of Southern Queensland |
Byline Affiliations | Atacama Large Millimetre Array, Chile |
Kapteyn Astronomical Institute, Netherlands | |
Center for Astrophysics Harvard and Smithsonian, United States | |
Institute of Planetology and Astrophysics of Grenoble, France | |
California Institute of Technology (Caltech), United States | |
Spanish–German Astronomical Centre, Spain | |
Clemson University, United States | |
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), United States | |
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, United States | |
University of Maryland, United States | |
University of California, United States | |
Autonomous University of Madrid, Spain | |
Max Planck Society, Germany | |
Eureka Scientific, United States | |
Atacama Large Millimeter Array, Chile | |
NASA Ames Research Center, United States | |
European Space Astronomy Centre, Spain | |
Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Germany | |
Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden | |
University of Hawaii, United States | |
National Institute of Aerospace Technology, Spain | |
Kyoto University, Japan | |
Paris Diderot University, France | |
University of Arizona, United States | |
European Southern Observatory (ESO), Germany | |
University of Hertfordshire, United Kingdom | |
University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom | |
University of Barcelona, Spain | |
Catholic University of Leuven, Belgium | |
Open University, United Kingdom | |
University of St Andrews, United Kingdom |
https://research.usq.edu.au/item/q4316/gasps-a-herschel-survey-of-gas-and-dust-in-protoplanetary-disks-summary-and-initial-statistics
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