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Published July 2010 | Published
Journal Article Open

Gas in the protoplanetary disc of HD169142: Herschel's view

Abstract

In an effort to simultaneously study the gas and dust components of the disc surrounding the young Herbig Ae star HD169142, we present far-IR observations obtained with the PACS instrument onboard the Herschel Space Observatory. This work is part of the open time key program GASPS, which is aimed at studying the evolution of protoplanetary discs. To constrain the gas properties in the outer disc, we observed the star at several key gas-lines, including [OI] 63.2 and 145.5 μm, [CII] 157.7 μm, CO 72.8 and 90.2 μm, and o-H_2O 78.7 and 179.5 μm. We only detect the [OI] 63.2 μm line in our spectra, and derive upper limits for the other lines. We complement our data set with PACS photometry and ^(12/13)CO data obtained with the Submillimeter Array. Furthermore, we derive accurate stellar parameters from optical spectra and UV to mm photometry. We model the dust continuum with the 3D radiative transfer code MCFOST and use this model as an input to analyse the gas lines with the thermochemical code ProDiMo. Our dataset is consistent with a simple model in which the gas and dust are well-mixed in a disc with a continuous structure between 20 and 200 AU, but this is not a unique solution. Our modelling effort allows us to constrain the gas-to-dust mass ratio as well as the relative abundance of the PAHs in the disc by simultaneously fitting the lines of several species that originate in different regions. Our results are inconsistent with a gas-poor disc with a large UV excess; a gas mass of 5.0 ± 2.0 × 10^(−3)M_⊙ is still present in this disc, in agreement with earlier CO observations.

Additional Information

© 2010 ESO. Received 30 March 2010, Accepted 12 April 2010, Published online 16 July 2010. Herschel is an ESA space observatory with science instruments provided by European-led Principal Investigator consortia and with important participation from NASA. We thank the PACS instrument team for their dedicated support, O. Panic for a discussion on her data and A. Juhász for providing the Spitzer/IRS data. C. Eiroa, G. Meeus, I. Mendigutía and B. Montesinos are partly supported by AYA 2008-01727; J. M. Alacid and E. Solano by AYA 2008-02156 and I. d. Gregorio by AYA 2008-06189 (Spanish grants). C. Pinte acknowledges funding from the EC 7${\rm th}$ FP as a Marie Curie Intra-European Fellow (PIEF-GA-2008-220891). J.-C. Augereau, G. Duchêne, J. Lebreton, C. Martin-Zaidi, F. Ménard and C. Pinte acknowledge PNPS, CNES and ANR (contract ANR-07-BLAN-0221) for financial support. D. R. Ardila, S. D. Brittain, B. Danchi, C. A. Grady, I. Pascucci, B. Riaz, A. Roberge, G. Sandell and C. D. Howards acknowledge NASA/JPL for funding support. PACS has been developed by a consortium of institutes led by MPE (Germany) and including UVIE (Austria); KUL, CSL, IMEC (Belgium); CEA, OAMP (France); MPIA (Germany); IFSI, OAP/AOT, OAA/CAISMI, LENS, SISSA (Italy); IAC (Spain). This development has been supported by the funding agencies BMVIT (Austria), ESA-PRODEX (Belgium), CEA/CNES (France), DLR (Germany), ASI (Italy), and CICT/MCT (Spain).

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