Other
Scientific paper
Oct 2007
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=2007dps....39.4201s&link_type=abstract
American Astronomical Society, DPS meeting #39, #42.01; Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society, Vol. 39, p.495
Other
Scientific paper
The dust sublimation zone (DSZ) is the region of pre-main sequence (PMS) disks where dust grains most easily anneal, sublime, and condense out of the gas. Thus the DSZ is a location where crystalline material may be enhanced and redistributed throughout the rest of the disk. A decade-long program to monitor the thermal emission of the grains located in this region demonstrates that large changes in emitted flux occur in many systems.
We have observed variability in the thermal emission between 3 and 13.5 microns in HD 31648 (MWC 480), HD 163296 (MWC 275), and DG Tau that are consistent with structural changes DSZ, where the transition from a disk of gas to one of gas+dust occurs. In the case of DG Tau, one photometric outburst observed between 3-5 microns was accompanied by increased emission of the 10 micron silicate band. During another similar outburst the silicate band went into absorption. These changes require lofting of the material above the disk into the line of sight. Such variability will affect the determination of the inner disk structure obtained through interferometry measurements, and changes in fringe visibility have recently been confirmed in the case of HD 163296.
Cyclic variations in the heating of the DSZ will lead to the annealing of large grains, the sublimation of smaller grains, possibly followed by re-condensation as the zone enters a cooling phase. Lofting of dust above the disk plane, and outward acceleration by stellar winds and radiation pressure, can re-distribute the processed material to cooler regions of the disk, where cometesimals form. This processing is consistent with the detection of the preferential concentration of large crystalline grains in the inner few AU of PMS disks using interferometric spectroscopy with the VLTI.
Ablordeppey K. E.
Beerman Lori C.
Brafford Suellen M.
Carpenter Jack W.
Grady Carol A.
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