H$_2$O distribution in the disc of HD 100546 and HD 163296: the role of dust dynamics and planet--disc interaction (2207.10744v1)
Abstract: [Abridged] Far-infrared observations with Herschel revealed a surprisingly low abundance of cold-water reservoirs in protoplanetary discs. On the other hand, a handful of discs show emission of hot water transitions excited at temperatures above a few hundred Kelvin. In particular, the protoplanetary discs around the Herbig Ae stars HD 100546 and HD 163296 show opposite trends in terms of cold versus hot water emission: in the first case, the ground-state transitions are detected and the high-J lines are undetected, while the trend is opposite in HD 163296. We performed a spectral analysis using the thermo-chemical model DALI. We find that HD 163296 is characterised by a water-rich (abundance $\gtrsim 10{-5}$) hot inner disc (within the snowline) and a water-poor ($< 10{-10}$) outer disc: the relative abundance may be due to the thermal desorption of icy grains that have migrated inward. Remarkably, the size of the H$_2$O emitting region corresponds to a narrow dust gap visible in the millimeter continuum at $r=10\,$au with ALMA. The low-J lines detected in HD 100546 instead imply an abundance of a few $10{-9}$ in the cold outer disc ($> 40$ au). The emitting region of the cold H$_2$O transitions is spatially coincident with that of the H$_2$O ice previously seen in the near-infrared. Notably, millimetre observations with ALMA reveal the presence of a large dust gap between nearly 40 and 150 au, likely opened by a massive embedded protoplanet. In both discs, we find that the warm molecular layer in the outer region (beyond the snow line) is highly depleted of water molecules, implying an oxygen-poor chemical composition of the gas. We speculate that gas-phase oxygen in the outer disc is readily depleted and its distribution in the disc is tightly coupled to the dynamics of the dust grains.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.