Wing-Fai Thi
Max Planck Society
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Featured researches published by Wing-Fai Thi.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2012
J. Lebreton; J.-C. Augereau; Wing-Fai Thi; Aki Roberge; J. Donaldson; Glenn Schneider; Sarah T. Maddison; Francois Menard; Pablo Riviere-Marichalar; Geoffrey S. Mathews; I. Kamp; C. Pinte; W. R. F. Dent; D. Barrado; Gaspard Duchene; Jean-François Gonzalez; C. A. Grady; G. Meeus; E. Pantin; Jonathan P. Williams; Peter Woitke
Context. HD 181327 is a young main sequence F5/F6 V star belonging to the beta Pictoris moving group (age similar to 12 Myr). It harbors an optically thin belt of circumstellar material at radius similar to 90 AU, presumed to result from collisions in a population of unseen planetesimals. Aims. We aim to study the dust properties in the belt in details, and to constrain the gas-to-dust ratio. Methods. We obtained far-infrared photometric observations of HD 181327 with the PACS instrument onboard the Herschel Space Observatory(star), complemented by new 3.2 mm observations carried with the ATCA(star star) array. The geometry of the belt is constrained with newly reduced HST/NICMOS scattered light images that allow the degeneracy between the disk geometry and the dust properties to be broken. We then use the radiative transfer code GRATER to compute a large grid of models, and we identify the grain models that best reproduce the spectral energy distribution (SED) through a Bayesian analysis. We attempt to detect the oxygen and ionized carbon fine-structure lines with Herschel/PACS spectroscopy, providing observables to our photochemical code ProDiMo. Results. The HST observations confirm that the dust is confined in a narrow belt. The continuum is detected with Herschel/PACS completing nicely the SED in the far-infrared. The disk is marginally resolved with both PACS and ATCA. A medium integration of the gas spectral lines only provides upper limits on the [OI] and [CII] line fluxes. We show that the HD 181327 dust disk consists of micron-sized grains of porous amorphous silicates and carbonaceous material surrounded by an important layer of ice, for a total dust mass of similar to 0.05 M-circle plus. (in grains up to 1 mm). We discuss evidences that the grains consists of fluffy aggregates. The upper limits on the gas atomic lines do not provide unambiguous constraints: only if the PAH abundance is high, the gas mass must be lower than similar to 17 M-circle plus. Conclusions. Despite the weak constraints on the gas disk, the age of HD 181327 and the properties of the dust disk suggest that it has passed the stage of gaseous planets formation. The dust reveals a population of icy planetesimals, similar to the primitive Edgeworth-Kuiper belt, that may be a source for the future delivery of water and volatiles onto forming terrestrial planets.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016
Peter Woitke; M. Min; Christophe Pinte; Wing-Fai Thi; Inga Kamp; Ch. Rab; F. Anthonioz; S. Antonellini; C. Baldovin-Saavedra; A. Carmona; C. Dominik; Odysseas Dionatos; J. S. Greaves; M. Güdel; John David Ilee; A. Liebhart; Francois Menard; Laura Rigon; L. B. F. M. Waters; G. Aresu; R. Meijerink; M. Spaans
We propose a set of standard assumptions for the modelling of Class II and III protoplanetary disks, which includes detailed continuum radiative transfer, thermo-chemical modelling of gas and ice, and line radiative transfer from optical to cm wavelengths. The first paper of this series focuses on the assumptions about the shape of the disk, the dust opacities, dust settling, and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). In particular, we propose new standard dust opacities for disk models, we present a simplified treatment of PAHs in radiative equilibrium which is sufficient to reproduce the PAH emission features, and we suggest using a simple yet physically justified treatment of dust settling. We roughly adjust parameters to obtain a model that predicts continuum and line observations that resemble typical multi-wavelength continuum and line observations of Class II T Tauri stars. We systematically study the impact of each model parameter (disk mass, disk extension and shape, dust settling, dust size and opacity, gas/dust ratio, etc.) on all mainstream continuum and line observables, in particular on the SED, mm-slope, continuum visibilities, and emission lines including [OI] 63 μm, high-J CO lines, (sub-)mm CO isotopologue lines, and CO fundamental ro-vibrational lines. We find that evolved dust properties, i.e. large grains, often needed to fit the SED, have important consequences for disk chemistry and heating/cooling balance, leading to stronger near- to far-IR emission lines in general. Strong dust settling and missing disk flaring have similar effects on continuum observations, but opposite effects on far-IR gas emission lines. PAH molecules can efficiently shield the gas from stellar UV radiation because of their strong absorption and negligible scattering opacities in comparison to evolved dust. The observable millimetre-slope of the SED can become significantly more gentle in the case of cold disk midplanes, which we find regularly in our T Tauri models. We propose to use line observations of robust chemical tracers of the gas, such as O, CO, and H2, as additional constraints to determine a number of key properties of the disks, such as disk shape and mass, opacities, and the dust/gas ratio, by simultaneously fitting continuum and line observations.
Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2013
W. R. F. Dent; Wing-Fai Thi; I. Kamp; Jonathan P. Williams; Francois Menard; S. J. Andrews; D. R. Ardila; G. Aresu; J.-C. Augereau; D. Barrado y Navascués; Sean David Brittain; A. Carmona; David R. Ciardi; W. C. Danchi; Jessica Donaldson; G. Duchene; C. Eiroa; D. Fedele; C. A. Grady; I. de Gregorio-Molsalvo; Christian D. Howard; N. Huélamo; Alexander V. Krivov; J. Lebreton; R. Liseau; C. Martin-Zaidi; Geoffrey S. Mathews; G. Meeus; I. Mendigutia; B. Montesinos
We describe a large-scale far-infrared line and continuum survey of protoplanetary disk through to young debris disk systems carried out using the ACS instrument on the Herschel Space Observatory. This Open Time Key program, known as GASPS (Gas Survey of Protoplanetary Systems), targeted similar to 250 young stars in narrow wavelength regions covering the [OI] fine structure line at 63 mu m the brightest far-infrared line in such objects. A subset of the brightest targets were also surveyed in [OI]145 mu m, [CII] at 157 mu m, as well as several transitions of H2O and high-excitation CO lines at selected wavelengths between 78 and 180 mu m. Additionally, GASPS included continuum photometry at 70, 100 and 160 mu m, around the peak of the dust emission. The targets were SED Class II-III T Tauri stars and debris disks from seven nearby young associations, along with a comparable sample of isolated Herbig AeBe stars. The aim was to study the global gas and dust content in a wide sample of circumstellar disks, combining the results with models in a systematic way. In this overview paper we review the scientific aims, target selection and observing strategy of the program. We summarise some of the initial results, showing line identifications, listing the detections, and giving a first statistical study of line detectability. The [OI] line at 63 mu m was the brightest line seen in almost all objects, by a factor of similar to 10. Overall [OI]63 mu m detection rates were 49%, with 100% of HAeBe stars and 43% of T Tauri stars detected. A comparison with published disk dust masses (derived mainly from sub-mm continuum, assuming standard values of the mm mass opacity) shows a dust mass threshold for [OI] 63 mu m detection of similar to 10(-5) M-circle dot. Normalising to a distance of 140 pc, 84% of objects with dust masses >= 10(-5) M-circle dot can be detected in this line in the present survey; 32% of those of mass 10(-6)-10(-5) M-circle dot, and only a very small number of unusual objects with lower masses can be detected. This is consistent with models with a moderate UV excess and disk flaring. For a given disk mass, [OI] detectability is lower for M stars compared with earlier spectral types. Both the continuum and line emission was, in most systems, spatially and spectrally unresolved and centred on the star, suggesting that emission in most cases was from the disk. Approximately 10 objects showed resolved emission, most likely from outflows. In the GASPS sample, [OI] detection rates in T Tauri associations in the 0.3-4 Myr age range were similar to 50%. For each association in the 5-20 Myr age range, similar to 2 stars remain detectable in [OI]63 mu m, and no systems were detected in associations with age >20 Myr. Comparing with the total number of young stars in each association, and assuming a ISM-like gas/dust ratio, this indicates that similar to 18% of stars retain a gas-rich disk of total mass similar to 1 M-Jupiter for 1-4 Myr, 1-7% keep such disks for 5-10 Myr, but none are detected beyond 10-20 Myr. The brightest [OI] objects from GASPS were also observed in [OI]145 mu m, [CII]157 mu m and CO J = 18 - 17, with detection rates of 20-40%. Detection of the [CII] line was not correlated with disk mass, suggesting it arises more commonly from a compact remnant envelope.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2011
Eric Tatulli; M. Benisty; Francois Menard; P. Varniere; C. Martin-Zaidi; Wing-Fai Thi; C. Pinte; F. Massi; G. Weigelt; K.-H. Hofmann; Romain G. Petrov
Studying the physical conditions in circumstellar disks is a crucial step toward understanding planet formation. Of particular interest is the case of HD 100546, a Herbig Be star that presents a gap within the first 13 AU of its protoplanetary disk, that may originate in the dynamical interactions of a forming planet. We gathered a large amount of new interferometric data using the AMBER/VLTI instrument in the H- and K-bands to spatially resolve the warm inner disk and constrain its structure. Then, combining these measurements with photometric observations, we analyze the circumstellar environment of HD 100546 in the light of a passive disk model based on 3D Monte-Carlo radiative transfer. Finally, we use hydrodynamical simulations of gap formation by planets to predict the radial surface density profile of the disk and test the hypothesis of ongoing planet formation. The SED and the NIR interferometric data are adequately reproduced by our model. We show that the H- and K-band emissions are coming mostly from the inner edge of the internal dust disk, located near 0.24 AU from the star, i.e., at the dust sublimation radius in our model. We directly measure an inclination of
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2011
Peter Woitke; B. Riaz; Gaspard Duchene; Ilaria Pascucci; A. R. Lyo; W. R. F. Dent; N. Phillips; Wing-Fai Thi; Francois Menard; Gregory J. Herczeg; Edwin A. Bergin; Alexander Brown; A. Mora; Inga Kamp; G. Aresu; Sean David Brittain; I. de Gregorio-Monsalvo; G. Sandell
33^{circ} pm 11^{circ}
The Astrophysical Journal | 2013
Christian D. Howard; Goeran Sandell; William D. Vacca; Gaspard Duchene; Geoffrey S. Mathews; J.-C. Augereau; D. Barrado; William R. F. Dent; C. Eiroa; C. A. Grady; Inga Kamp; G. Meeus; Francois Menard; Christophe Pinte; L. Podio; Pablo Riviere-Marichalar; Aki Roberge; Wing-Fai Thi; S. Vicente; Jonathan P. Williams
and a position angle of
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2012
I. Tilling; Peter Woitke; G. Meeus; A. Mora; B. Montesinos; Pablo Riviere-Marichalar; C. Eiroa; Wing-Fai Thi; Andrea Isella; Aki Roberge; C. Martin-Zaidi; Inga Kamp; C. Pinte; G. Sandell; William D. Vacca; Francois Menard; I. Mendigutia; Gaspard Duchene; W. R. F. Dent; G. Aresu; R. Meijerink; M. Spaans
140^{circ} pm 16^{circ}
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2012
Pablo Riviere-Marichalar; Francois Menard; Wing-Fai Thi; Inga Kamp; B. Montesinos; G. Meeus; Peter Woitke; Christian D. Howard; G. Sandell; Linda Podio; W. R. F. Dent; I. Mendigutia; C. Pinte; G. J. White; D. Barrado
for the inner disk. This is similar to the values found for the outer disk (
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2014
Andres Carmona; Christophe Pinte; Wing-Fai Thi; M. Benisty; Francois Menard; C. A. Grady; Inga Kamp; Peter Woitke; J. Olofsson; Aki Roberge; Sean David Brittain; Gaspard Duchene; G. Meeus; C. Martin-Zaidi; Bill Dent; J.-B. Le Bouquin; Jean-Philippe Berger
i simeq 42^{circ}
The Astrophysical Journal | 2013
Aki Roberge; Inga Kamp; B. Montesinos; W. R. F. Dent; G. Meeus; Jessica Donaldson; J. Olofsson; A. Moór; J.-C. Augereau; Christian D. Howard; C. Eiroa; Wing-Fai Thi; D. R. Ardila; G. Sandell; P. Woitke
,