Variable H$^{13}$CO$^+$ Emission in the IM Lup Disk: X-ray Driven Time-Dependent Chemistry?


Abstract in English

We report the first detection of a substantial brightening event in an isotopologue of a key molecular ion, HCO$^+$, within a protoplanetary disk of a T Tauri star. The H$^{13}$CO$^+$ $J=3-2$ rotational transition was observed three times toward IM Lup between July 2014 and May 2015 with the Atacama Large Millimeter Array. The first two observations show similar spectrally integrated line and continuum fluxes, while the third observation shows a doubling in the disk integrated $J=3-2$ line flux compared to the continuum, which does not change between the three epochs. We explore models of an X-ray active star irradiating the disk via stellar flares, and find that the optically thin H$^{13}$CO$^+$ emission variation can potentially be explained via X-ray driven chemistry temporarily enhancing the HCO$^+$ abundance in the upper layers of the disk atmosphere during large or prolonged flaring events. If the HCO$^+$ enhancement is indeed caused by a X-ray flare, future observations should be able to spatially resolve these events and potentially enable us to watch the chemical aftermath of the high-energy stellar radiation propagating across the face of protoplanetary disks, providing a new pathway to explore ionization physics and chemistry, including electron density, in disks.

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