TY - JOUR
T1 - Water in Protoplanetary Disks with JWST-MIRI
T2 - Spectral Excitation Atlas and Radial Distribution from Temperature Diagnostic Diagrams and Doppler Mapping
AU - the JDISCS collaboration
AU - Banzatti, Andrea
AU - Salyk, Colette
AU - Pontoppidan, Klaus M.
AU - Carr, John S.
AU - Zhang, Ke
AU - Arulanantham, Nicole
AU - Krijt, Sebastiaan
AU - Öberg, Karin I.
AU - Cleeves, L. Ilsedore
AU - Najita, Joan R.
AU - Pascucci, Ilaria
AU - Blake, Geoffrey A.
AU - Romero-Mirza, Carlos E.
AU - Bergin, Edwin A.
AU - Cieza, Lucas A.
AU - Pinilla, Paola
AU - Long, Feng
AU - Mallaney, Patrick
AU - Xie, Chengyan
AU - Waggoner, Abygail R.
AU - Kaeufer, Till
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025. The Author(s). Published by the American Astronomical Society.
PY - 2025/3/3
Y1 - 2025/3/3
N2 - This work aims at providing fundamental general tools for the analysis of water spectra as observed in protoplanetary disks with JWST-MIRI. We analyze 25 high-quality spectra from the JDISC Survey reduced with asteroid calibrators as presented in K. M. Pontoppidan et al. (2024). First, we present a spectral atlas to illustrate the clustering of H2O transitions from different upper-level energies (Eu) and identify single (unblended) transitions that provide the most reliable measurements. With that, we demonstrate two important excitation effects: the opacity saturation of ortho-para line pairs that overlap, and the subthermal excitation of excitation of v = 1-1 lines scattered across the v = 0-0 rotational band. Second, we define a shorter list of fundamental lines spanning Eu = 1500-6000 K to develop simple line-ratio diagnostic diagrams for the radial temperature distribution of water in inner disks, which are interpreted using discrete temperature components and power-law radial gradients. Third, we report the detection of disk-rotation Doppler broadening of molecular lines, which confirms the radial distribution of water emission including, for the first time, the radially extended ≈170-220 K reservoir close to the snowline. The combination of measured line ratios and broadening suggests that drift-dominated disks have shallower temperature gradients with an extended cooler disk surface enriched by ice sublimation. We also report the first detection of an H2O-rich inner disk wind from narrow blueshifted absorption in the ro-vibrational lines. We summarize these findings and tools into a general recipe to make the study of water in planet-forming regions reliable, effective, and sustainable for samples of >100 disks.
AB - This work aims at providing fundamental general tools for the analysis of water spectra as observed in protoplanetary disks with JWST-MIRI. We analyze 25 high-quality spectra from the JDISC Survey reduced with asteroid calibrators as presented in K. M. Pontoppidan et al. (2024). First, we present a spectral atlas to illustrate the clustering of H2O transitions from different upper-level energies (Eu) and identify single (unblended) transitions that provide the most reliable measurements. With that, we demonstrate two important excitation effects: the opacity saturation of ortho-para line pairs that overlap, and the subthermal excitation of excitation of v = 1-1 lines scattered across the v = 0-0 rotational band. Second, we define a shorter list of fundamental lines spanning Eu = 1500-6000 K to develop simple line-ratio diagnostic diagrams for the radial temperature distribution of water in inner disks, which are interpreted using discrete temperature components and power-law radial gradients. Third, we report the detection of disk-rotation Doppler broadening of molecular lines, which confirms the radial distribution of water emission including, for the first time, the radially extended ≈170-220 K reservoir close to the snowline. The combination of measured line ratios and broadening suggests that drift-dominated disks have shallower temperature gradients with an extended cooler disk surface enriched by ice sublimation. We also report the first detection of an H2O-rich inner disk wind from narrow blueshifted absorption in the ro-vibrational lines. We summarize these findings and tools into a general recipe to make the study of water in planet-forming regions reliable, effective, and sustainable for samples of >100 disks.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85218926187
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85218926187#tab=citedBy
U2 - 10.3847/1538-3881/ada962
DO - 10.3847/1538-3881/ada962
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85218926187
SN - 0004-6256
VL - 169
JO - Astronomical Journal
JF - Astronomical Journal
IS - 3
M1 - 165
ER -