A photoevaporative gap in the closest planet-forming disc
Published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 2017
Recommended citation: Ercolano, Rosotti, Picogna & Testi (2017). "A photoevaporative gap in the closest planet-forming disc." Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 464, 1. https://academic.oup.com/mnrasl/article/464/1/L95/2264423
The dispersal of the circumstellar discs of dust and gas surrounding young low-mass stars has important implications for the formation of planetary systems. Photoevaporation from energetic radiation from the central object is thought to drive the dispersal in the majority of discs, by creating a gap which disconnects the outer from the inner regions of the disc and then disperses the outer disc from the inside-out, while the inner disc keeps draining viscously on to the star. In this Letter, we show that the disc around TW Hya, the closest protoplanetary disc to Earth, may be the first object where a photoevaporative gap has been imaged around the time at which it is being created. Indeed, the detected gap in the Atacama large millimeter/submillimeter array images is consistent with the expectations of X-ray photoevaporation models, thus not requiring the presence of a planet. The photoevaporation model is also consistent with a broad range of properties of the TW Hya system, e.g. accretion rate and the location of the gap at the onset of dispersal. We show that the central, unresolved 870 μm continuum source might be produced by free–free emission from the gas and/or residual dust inside the gap.

Recommended citation: Ercolano, Rosotti, Picogna & Testi et al. (2017) “A photoevaporative gap in the closest planet-forming disc” MNRAS 464, 1.