Abstract

Abstract Measuring the gas mass of protoplanetary disks, the reservoir available for giant planet formation, has proven to be difficult. We currently lack a far-infrared observatory capable of observing HD, and the most common gas mass tracer, CO, suffers from a poorly constrained CO-to-H2 ratio. Expanding on previous work, we investigate if N2H+, a chemical tracer of CO-poor gas, can be used to observationally measure the CO-to-H2 ratio and correct CO-based gas masses. Using disk structures obtained from the literature, we set up thermochemical models for three disks, TW Hya, DM Tau and GM Aur, to examine how well the CO-to-H2 ratio and gas mass can be measured from N2H+ and C18O line fluxes. Furthermore, we compare these gas masses to gas masses independently measured from archival HD observations. The N2H+(3 − 2)/C18O(2 − 1) line ratio scales with the disk CO-to-H2 ratio. Using these two lines, we measure 4.6 × 10−3 M ⊙ ≤ M disk ≤ 1.1 × 10−1 M ⊙ for TW Hya, 1.5 × 10−2 M ⊙ ≤ M disk ≤ 9.6 × 10−2 M ⊙ for GM Aur and 3.1 × 10−2 M ⊙ ≤ M disk ≤ 9.6 × 10−2 M ⊙ for DM Tau. These gas masses agree with values obtained from HD within their respective uncertainties. The uncertainty on the N2H+ + C18O gas mass can be reduced by observationally constraining the cosmic-ray ionization rate in disks. These results demonstrate the potential of using the combination of N2H+ and C18O to measure gas masses of protoplanetary disks.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call