Some pictograms

Artist's impressions of protoplanetary disks

These are artist's impressions of flaring protoplanetary disks (made by V. Icke using Canvas). The first (left) one depicts a purely flaring disk without inner cavity. The second (right) one depicts the disk geometry we propose for Herbig Ae/Be stars in which dust evaporation destroys the dust inward of a certain radius, leaving the opaque part of the disk with a cleared-out cavity. The inner rim of this disk puffs up and casts a shadow over part of the flaring disk.

Pictograms of the two geometries for Herbig Ae/Be star disks

These are the four pictograms from the paper by Dullemond, A&A 395, 853-862 (2002). The first two geometries are the ones that are the main types: the flared and the self-shadowed one. The third is a geometry that can appear in certain cases, in particular if dust settling sets in, but is more rate. The fourth one is a pictogram for a completely optically thin disk.

Flaring disk with inner rim:
This is the flared disk + puffed-up inner rim geometry for a disk around a Herbig Ae/Be star. This geometry is associated with the group I sources in the classification by Meeus et al. (2001).

Self-shadowed disk with inner rim:
This is the fully self-shadowed disk + puffed-up inner rim geometry for a disk around a Herbig Ae/Be star. This geometry is associated with the group II sources in the classification by Meeus et al. (2001). See paper Dullemond (2002) for more clarification.

Partially flared disk (outer disk shadowed):
Under special circumstances it can happen that the disk flares only partially, and the outer disk is shadowed by the inner flaring disk. This is expected to happen mostly in T Tauri star disks. No association with an observed kind of SED is yet given in our papers, but this may happen in the future.

Fully transparent disk ('debris disk' or 'Vega-like disk'):
When the optical depth of the disk drops below unity, one cannot anymore speak about the 'shape' of the disk as it does not have a tau=1 surface anymore. Here is the pictogram used in the paper.

IMPORTANT NOTE:
These pictograms may be used freely, but only under the condition that proper references are made to the corresponding paper.


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