Vertical gas flows—such as winds and meridional circulations—are natural outcomes of protoplanetary disk processes and play a critical role in the earliest stages of planet formation. We analyze the vertical gas motions in 14 disks, as part of the exoALMA Large Program, focusing on the 12CO J = 3–2 and 13CO J = 3–2 emission lines. Using discminer to model the Keplerian velocity field, we extract line-of-sight velocity residuals and measure the radial and vertical components of the gas motion. Vertical motions are detected in most disks. Two types of patterns emerge: (1) oscillatory up/down flows, likely linked to instabilities; and (2) transitions from downward to upward motions that we interpret as the bases of disk winds. In most cases, the velocity amplitudes are of a few tens of m s−1. However, two disks, MWC758 and CQ Tau, show two spiral velocity features in their residual maps, red- and blueshifted, which we interpret as vertical velocities reaching up to ∼350 m s−1 (∼0.7cs), consistent with the gas motion in eccentric disks. Fast upward motions (up to 500 m s−1; ∼1.8cs) are also detected in the outer disk of MWC758. Synthetic observations from (magneto)hydrodynamic simulations validate the reliability of our method. Although strong molecular winds appear to be relatively rare in 12CO and 13CO, our study shows that, when traced by deep high-spectral-resolution line data, protoplanetary disks exhibit ubiquitous vertical flows. However, their overall velocity structure is highly complex, preventing the identification of a coherent dominant physical mechanism driving the vertical motions across all disks, thus requiring further theoretical investigation.
exoALMA. XX. Tomographic Detection of Embedded Planets in Protoplanetary Disks / A.F. Izquierdo, J. Bae, S. Facchini, E.F. Van Dishoeck, M. Barraza-Alfaro, M. Benisty, R. Teague, J. Stadler, S.M. Andrews, G. Cataldi, N. Cuello, P. Curone, I. Czekala, D. Fasano, M. Flock, M. Fukagawa, M. Galloway-Sprietsma, C. Hall, J. Huang, J.D. Ilee, A. Isella, J. Lawrence, G. Lesur, G. Lodato, C. Longarini, R.A. Loomis, F. Ménard, C. Pinte, D.J. Price, G. Rosotti, L. Testi, D.J. Wilner, A.J. Winter, L. Wölfer, B. Zawadzki. - In: THE ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS. - ISSN 2041-8205. - 1000:1(2026), pp. L13.1-L13.29. [10.3847/2041-8213/ae48fd]
exoALMA. XX. Tomographic Detection of Embedded Planets in Protoplanetary Disks
S. Facchini;P. Curone;G. Lodato;C. Longarini;G. Rosotti;
2026
Abstract
Vertical gas flows—such as winds and meridional circulations—are natural outcomes of protoplanetary disk processes and play a critical role in the earliest stages of planet formation. We analyze the vertical gas motions in 14 disks, as part of the exoALMA Large Program, focusing on the 12CO J = 3–2 and 13CO J = 3–2 emission lines. Using discminer to model the Keplerian velocity field, we extract line-of-sight velocity residuals and measure the radial and vertical components of the gas motion. Vertical motions are detected in most disks. Two types of patterns emerge: (1) oscillatory up/down flows, likely linked to instabilities; and (2) transitions from downward to upward motions that we interpret as the bases of disk winds. In most cases, the velocity amplitudes are of a few tens of m s−1. However, two disks, MWC758 and CQ Tau, show two spiral velocity features in their residual maps, red- and blueshifted, which we interpret as vertical velocities reaching up to ∼350 m s−1 (∼0.7cs), consistent with the gas motion in eccentric disks. Fast upward motions (up to 500 m s−1; ∼1.8cs) are also detected in the outer disk of MWC758. Synthetic observations from (magneto)hydrodynamic simulations validate the reliability of our method. Although strong molecular winds appear to be relatively rare in 12CO and 13CO, our study shows that, when traced by deep high-spectral-resolution line data, protoplanetary disks exhibit ubiquitous vertical flows. However, their overall velocity structure is highly complex, preventing the identification of a coherent dominant physical mechanism driving the vertical motions across all disks, thus requiring further theoretical investigation.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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