The dry and carbon poor inner disk of TW Hya: evidence for a massive icy dust trap
Abstract
Gas giants accrete their envelopes from the gas and dust of proto-planetary disks, so it is important to determine the composition of the inner few AU, where most giant planets are expected to form. We aim to constrain the elemental carbon and oxygen abundance in the inner disk (R<2.3 AU) of TW Hya and compare with the outer disk (R>2.3 AU) where carbon and oxygen appear underabundant by a factor of 50. Archival infrared observations of TW Hya are compared with a detailed thermo-chemical model, DALI. The inner disk gas mass and elemental C and O abundances are varied to fit the infrared CO, H2 and H2O line fluxes. Best fitting models have an inner disk that has a gas mass of 2 × 10-4 M with C/H ≈ 3 × 10-6 and O/H ≈ 6 × 10-6. The elemental oxygen and carbon abundances of the inner disk are 50 times underabundant compared to the ISM and are consistent with those found in the outer disk. The uniformly low volatile abundances imply that the inner disk is not enriched by ices on drifting bodies that evaporate. This indicates that drifting grains are stopped in a dust trap outside the water ice line. Such a dust trap would also form a cavity as seen in high resolution sub-millimeter continuum observations. If CO is the major carbon carrier in the ices, dust needs to be trapped efficiently outside the CO ice line of 20 AU. This would imply that the shallow sub-millimeter rings in the TW Hya disk outside of 20 AU correspond to very efficient dust traps. The more likely scenario is that more than 98\% of the CO has been converted into less volatile species, e.g. CO2 and CH3OH. A giant planet forming in the inner disk would be accreting gas with low carbon and oxygen abundances as well as very little icy dust, potentially leading to a planet atmosphere with strongly substellar C/H and O/H ratios.
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