Radiation thermo-chemical models of protoplanetary discs IV. Modelling CO ro-vibrational emission from Herbig Ae discs
Author
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Thi, W. F.
Author
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Kamp, I.
es_CL
Author
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Woitke, P.
es_CL
Author
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Van der Plas, Gerrit
es_CL
Author
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Bertelsen, R.
es_CL
Author
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Wiesenfeld, L.
es_CL
Admission date
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2014-03-11T14:39:05Z
Available date
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2014-03-11T14:39:05Z
Publication date
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2013
Cita de ítem
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A&A 551, A49 (2013)
en_US
Identifier
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DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/201219210
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/126438
General note
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Artículo de publicación ISI
en_US
Abstract
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Context. The carbon monoxide (CO) ro-vibrational emission from discs around Herbig Ae stars and T Tauri stars with strong ultraviolet
emissions suggests that fluorescence pumping from the ground X1Σ+ to the electronic A1Π state of CO should be taken into
account in disc models.
Aims. We wish to understand the excitation mechanism of CO ro-vibrational emission seen in Herbig Ae discs, in particular in transitions
involving highly excited rotational and vibrational levels.
Methods. We implemented a CO model molecule that includes up to 50 rotational levels within nine vibrational levels for the ground
and A-excited states in the radiative-photochemical code ProDiMo.We took CO collisions with hydrogen molecules (H2), hydrogen
atoms (H), helium (He), and electrons into account.We estimated the missing collision rates using standard scaling laws and discussed
their limitations. We tested the effectiveness of ultraviolet (UV) fluorescence pumping for the population of high-vibrational levels
(v = 1–9, J = 1–50) for four Herbig Ae disc models (disc mass Mdisc = 10−2, 10−4 and inner radius Rdisc = 1, 20 AU). We tested the
effect of infrared (IR) pumping on the CO vibrational temperature and the rotational population in the ground vibrational level.
Results. UV fluorescence and IR pumping impact on the population of ro-vibrational v > 1 levels. The v = 1 rotational levels
are populated at rotational temperatures between the radiation temperature around 4.6 μm and the gas kinetic temperature. The UV
pumping efficiency increases with decreasing disc mass. The consequence is that the vibrational temperatures Tvib, which measure the
relative populations between the vibrational levels, are higher than the disc gas kinetic temperatures (suprathermal population of the
vibrational levels). The effect is more important for low-density gases because of lower collisional de-excitations.The UV pumping
is more efficient for low-mass (Mdisc < 10−3 M ) than high-mass (Mdisc > 10−3 M ) discs. Rotational temperatures from fundamental
transitions derived using optically thick 12CO v = 1−0 lines do not reflect the gas kinetic temperature. Uncertainties in the rate coefficients
within an order of magnitude result in variations in the CO line fluxes up to 20%. CO pure rotational levels with energies
lower than 1000 K are populated in local thermodynamic equilibrium but are sensitive to a number of vibrational levels included in
the model. The 12CO pure rotational lines are highly optically thick for transition from levels up to Eupper = 2000 K. The model line
fluxes are comparable with the observed line fluxes from typical Herbig Ae low- and high-mass discs.