The Astrophysical Journal (Jan 2025)

Discovery of Radio Recombination Lines from Proplyds in the Orion Nebula Cluster

  • Ryan D. Boyden,
  • Kimberly L. Emig,
  • Nicholas P. Ballering,
  • Charles J. Law,
  • Thomas J. Haworth,
  • Jonathan C. Tan,
  • L. Ilsedore Cleeves,
  • Zhi-Yun Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/adbbcc
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 983, no. 1
p. 81

Abstract

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We present new Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array observations that, for the first time, detect hydrogen and helium radio recombination lines from a protoplanetary disk. We imaged the Orion Nebula Cluster at 3.1 mm with a spectral setup that covered the n = 42 → 41 transitions of hydrogen (H41 α ) and helium (He41 α ). The unprecedented sensitivity of these observations enables us to search for radio recombination lines toward the positions of ∼200 protoplanetary disks. We detect H41 α from 17 disks, all of which are HST-identified “proplyds.” The detected H41 α emission is spatially coincident with the locations of proplyd ionization fronts, indicating that proplyd H41 α emission is produced by gas that has been photoevaporated off the disk and ionized by UV radiation from massive stars. We measure the fluxes and widths of the detected H41 α lines and find line fluxes of ∼30–800 mJy km s ^−1 and line widths of ∼30–90 km s ^−1 . The derived line widths indicate that the broadening of proplyd H41 α emission is dominated by outflowing gas motions associated with external photoevaporation. The derived line fluxes, when compared with measurements of 3.1 mm free–free flux, imply that the ionization fronts of H41 α -detected proplyds have electron temperatures of ∼6000–11,000 K and electron densities of ∼10 ^6 –10 ^7 cm ^−3 . Finally, we detect He41 α toward one H41 α -detected source and find evidence that this system is helium-rich. Our study demonstrates that radio recombination lines are readily detectable in ionized photoevaporating disks, providing a new way to measure disk properties in clustered star-forming regions.

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