TY - GEN
T1 - Carbon but No CO? Circumstellar Gas Absorption in FUV Spectra of the Unusual 49 Ceti Debris Disk
AU - Roberge, Aki
AU - Welsh, B.
AU - Kamp, I.
AU - Grady, C.
AU - Weinberger, A. J.
PY - 2014/1
Y1 - 2014/1
N2 - We present the first high-resolution HST-STIS FUV spectra of the nearby
A1V star 49 Ceti. The system is famous for harboring a circumstellar
disk that shows the dust properties of a debris disk, but the gas
properties of a low-mass protoplanetary disk. It is one of only two or
three bona fide debris disks that show abundant sub-mm CO emission.
Since the disk is nearly edge-on, the line of sight to the central star
passes through the disk, permitting sensitive probes of the
circumstellar gas with absorption spectroscopy. The spectra show many
narrow circumstellar gas lines arising from several atomic species,
including neutral carbon, a gas not seen in the diffuse interstellar
medium. We present an accurate measurement of the line of sight column
density, obtained from an unsaturated, spin-forbidden line. But carbon
monoxide, the gas we expected to be most abundant, is not seen. We
discuss possible explanations for this surprising observation, and the
next steps in analyzing this rich dataset.
AB - We present the first high-resolution HST-STIS FUV spectra of the nearby
A1V star 49 Ceti. The system is famous for harboring a circumstellar
disk that shows the dust properties of a debris disk, but the gas
properties of a low-mass protoplanetary disk. It is one of only two or
three bona fide debris disks that show abundant sub-mm CO emission.
Since the disk is nearly edge-on, the line of sight to the central star
passes through the disk, permitting sensitive probes of the
circumstellar gas with absorption spectroscopy. The spectra show many
narrow circumstellar gas lines arising from several atomic species,
including neutral carbon, a gas not seen in the diffuse interstellar
medium. We present an accurate measurement of the line of sight column
density, obtained from an unsaturated, spin-forbidden line. But carbon
monoxide, the gas we expected to be most abundant, is not seen. We
discuss possible explanations for this surprising observation, and the
next steps in analyzing this rich dataset.
UR - http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2014AAS...22340905R
M3 - Conference contribution
VL - AAS Meeting #223, id.409.05
SP - 409.05
BT - American Astronomical Society Meeting Abstracts
PB - American Astronomical Society
ER -