TY - JOUR
T1 - The First JWST View of a 30-Myr-old Protoplanetary Disk Reveals a Late-stage Carbon-rich Phase
AU - the JDISCS collaboration
AU - Long, Feng
AU - Pascucci, Ilaria
AU - Houge, Adrien
AU - Banzatti, Andrea
AU - Pontoppidan, Klaus M.
AU - Najita, Joan
AU - Krijt, Sebastiaan
AU - Xie, Chengyan
AU - Williams, Joe
AU - Herczeg, Gregory J.
AU - Andrews, Sean M.
AU - Bergin, Edwin
AU - Blake, Geoffrey A.
AU - Colmenares, María José
AU - Harsono, Daniel
AU - Romero-Mirza, Carlos E.
AU - Li, Rixin
AU - Lu, Cicero X.
AU - Pinilla, Paola
AU - Wilner, David J.
AU - Vioque, Miguel
AU - Zhang, Ke
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025. The Author(s). Published by the American Astronomical Society.
PY - 2025/1/10
Y1 - 2025/1/10
N2 - We present a JWST MIRI/MRS spectrum of the inner disk of WISE J044634.16-262756.1B (hereafter J0446B), an old (∼34 Myr) M4.5 star but with hints of ongoing accretion. The spectrum is molecule-rich and dominated by hydrocarbons. We detect 14 molecular species (H2, CH3, CH4, C2H2 13CCH2, C2H4, C2H6, C3H4, C4H2, C6H6, HCN, HC3N, CO2, and 13CO2) and two atomic lines ([Ne ii] and [Ar ii]), all observed for the first time in a disk at this age. The detection of spatially unresolved H2 and Ne gas strongly supports that J0446B hosts a long-lived primordial disk, rather than a debris disk. The marginal H2O detection and the high C2H2/CO2 column density ratio indicate that the inner disk of J0446B has a very carbon-rich chemistry, with a gas-phase C/O ratio ≳2, consistent with what has been found in most primordial disks around similarly low-mass stars. In the absence of significant outer disk dust substructures, inner disks are expected to first become water-rich due to the rapid inward drift of icy pebbles and evolve into carbon-rich as outer disk gas flows inward on longer timescales. The faint millimeter emission in such low-mass star disks implies that they may have depleted their outer icy pebble reservoir early and already passed the water-rich phase. Models with pebble drift and volatile transport suggest that maintaining a carbon-rich chemistry for tens of Myr likely requires a slowly evolving disk with α-viscosity ≲10−4. This study represents the first detailed characterization of disk gas at ∼30 Myr, strongly motivating further studies into the final stages of disk evolution.
AB - We present a JWST MIRI/MRS spectrum of the inner disk of WISE J044634.16-262756.1B (hereafter J0446B), an old (∼34 Myr) M4.5 star but with hints of ongoing accretion. The spectrum is molecule-rich and dominated by hydrocarbons. We detect 14 molecular species (H2, CH3, CH4, C2H2 13CCH2, C2H4, C2H6, C3H4, C4H2, C6H6, HCN, HC3N, CO2, and 13CO2) and two atomic lines ([Ne ii] and [Ar ii]), all observed for the first time in a disk at this age. The detection of spatially unresolved H2 and Ne gas strongly supports that J0446B hosts a long-lived primordial disk, rather than a debris disk. The marginal H2O detection and the high C2H2/CO2 column density ratio indicate that the inner disk of J0446B has a very carbon-rich chemistry, with a gas-phase C/O ratio ≳2, consistent with what has been found in most primordial disks around similarly low-mass stars. In the absence of significant outer disk dust substructures, inner disks are expected to first become water-rich due to the rapid inward drift of icy pebbles and evolve into carbon-rich as outer disk gas flows inward on longer timescales. The faint millimeter emission in such low-mass star disks implies that they may have depleted their outer icy pebble reservoir early and already passed the water-rich phase. Models with pebble drift and volatile transport suggest that maintaining a carbon-rich chemistry for tens of Myr likely requires a slowly evolving disk with α-viscosity ≲10−4. This study represents the first detailed characterization of disk gas at ∼30 Myr, strongly motivating further studies into the final stages of disk evolution.
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U2 - 10.3847/2041-8213/ad99d2
DO - 10.3847/2041-8213/ad99d2
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85214466998
SN - 2041-8205
VL - 978
JO - Astrophysical Journal Letters
JF - Astrophysical Journal Letters
IS - 2
M1 - L30
ER -