It is likely that young protostellar disks undergo a self-gravitating phase. Such systems are characterized by the presence of a spiral pattern that can be either in a quasi-steady state or in a nonlinear unstable condition. This spiral wave affects both the gas dynamics and kinematics, resulting in deviations from the Keplerian rotation. Recently, a lot of attention has been devoted to kinematic studies of planet-forming environments, and we are now able to measure even small perturbations of velocity field (≲1% of the Keplerian speed) thanks to high spatial and spectral resolution observations of protostellar disks. In this work, we investigate the kinematic signatures of gravitational instability: we perform an analytical study of the linear response of a self-gravitating disk to a spiral-like perturbation, focusing our attention on the velocity field perturbations. We show that unstable disks have clear kinematic imprints into the gas component across the entire disk extent, due to the GI spiral wave perturbation, resulting in deviations from Keplerian rotation. The shape of these signatures depends on several parameters, but they are significantly affected by the cooling factor: by detecting these features, we can put constraints on protoplanetary disk cooling.

Investigating Protoplanetary Disk Cooling through Kinematics: Analytical GI Wiggle / C. Longarini, G. Lodato, C. Toci, B. Veronesi, C. Hall, R. Dong, J. Patrick Terry. - In: THE ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS. - ISSN 2041-8205. - 920:2(2021), pp. L41.1-L41.9. [10.3847/2041-8213/ac2df6]

Investigating Protoplanetary Disk Cooling through Kinematics: Analytical GI Wiggle

C. Longarini
Primo
;
G. Lodato
Secondo
;
C. Toci;B. Veronesi;
2021

Abstract

It is likely that young protostellar disks undergo a self-gravitating phase. Such systems are characterized by the presence of a spiral pattern that can be either in a quasi-steady state or in a nonlinear unstable condition. This spiral wave affects both the gas dynamics and kinematics, resulting in deviations from the Keplerian rotation. Recently, a lot of attention has been devoted to kinematic studies of planet-forming environments, and we are now able to measure even small perturbations of velocity field (≲1% of the Keplerian speed) thanks to high spatial and spectral resolution observations of protostellar disks. In this work, we investigate the kinematic signatures of gravitational instability: we perform an analytical study of the linear response of a self-gravitating disk to a spiral-like perturbation, focusing our attention on the velocity field perturbations. We show that unstable disks have clear kinematic imprints into the gas component across the entire disk extent, due to the GI spiral wave perturbation, resulting in deviations from Keplerian rotation. The shape of these signatures depends on several parameters, but they are significantly affected by the cooling factor: by detecting these features, we can put constraints on protoplanetary disk cooling.
English
Settore FIS/05 - Astronomia e Astrofisica
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Ricerca di base
Pubblicazione scientifica
   Dust and gas in planet forming discs (DUSTBUSTER)
   DUSTBUSTER
   EUROPEAN COMMISSION
   H2020
   823823
2021
American Astronomical Society
920
2
L41
1
9
9
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
scopus
crossref
wos
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Investigating Protoplanetary Disk Cooling through Kinematics: Analytical GI Wiggle / C. Longarini, G. Lodato, C. Toci, B. Veronesi, C. Hall, R. Dong, J. Patrick Terry. - In: THE ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS. - ISSN 2041-8205. - 920:2(2021), pp. L41.1-L41.9. [10.3847/2041-8213/ac2df6]
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Article (author)
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C. Longarini, G. Lodato, C. Toci, B. Veronesi, C. Hall, R. Dong, J. Patrick Terry
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/896493
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