Abstract

Context. The inner regions of protoplanetary disks are believed to be the primary locations of planet formation and the processes that influence the global evolution of the disk, such as magnetohydrodynamic winds and photoevaporation. Transition disks with large inner dust cavities are ideal targets for studying the inner regions (of tens of au) of disks, as this is where the central emission can be fully disentangled from the outer disk emission. Aims. We present a homogeneous multiwavelength analysis of the continuum emission in a sample of 11 transition disks. We investigate the nature of the central emission close to the star, distinguishing between thermal dust and free-free emission. Methods. We combined spatially resolved measurements of continuum emission from the archival Atacama Large Millimeter/Submillimeter Array data with centimeter-wave (cm-wave) observations from the literature to study the spectral indices of the inner and outer disks separately. Results. While the emission from the outer disks is consistent with thermal dust emission, 10 out of 11 of the spectral indices estimated for the central emission close to the star suggest that this emission is free-free emission that is likely associated with an ionized jet or a disk wind. We found no correlation between the free-free luminosity and the accretion luminosity or the X-ray luminosity and this argues against an explanation based on a potential photoevaporative wind. A sub-linear correlation between the ionized mass loss rate and the accretion rate onto the star was observed, suggesting the origin is drawn from the ionized jet. Conclusions. The relative lack of millimeter-dust (mm-dust) grains in the majority of inner disks in transition disks indicates that either such dust grains have drifted quickly towards the central star, that grain growth is less efficient in the inner disk, or that grains rapidly grow to planetesimal sizes in the inner disk. The observed correlation between the ionized mass loss rate and the accretion rate suggests the outflow is strictly connected to stellar accretion and that accretion in these disks is driven by a jet.

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