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The chemical inventory of the inner regions of planet-forming disks - the JWST/MINDS program.

Inga KampThomas K HenningAditya M ArabhaviGiulio BettoniValentin ChristiaensDanny GasmanSierra L GrantMaria Morales-CalderónBenoit TaboneAlain AbergelOlivier AbsilIoannis ArgyriouDavid BarradoAnthony BoccalettiJeroen BouwmanAlessio Caratti O GarattiEwine F van DishoeckVincent GeersAdrian M GlauserManuel GüdelRodrigo GuadarramaHyerin JangJayatee KanwarPierre-Olivier LagageFred LahuisMichael MuellerCyrine NehméGöran OlofssonEric PantinNicole PawellekGiulia PerottiTom P RayDonna Rodgers-LeeMatthias SamlandSilvia ScheithauerJürgen SchreiberKamber SchwarzMilou TemminkBart VandenbusscheMarissa VlasblomChristoffel WaelkensL B F M WatersGillian Wright
Published in: Faraday discussions (2023)
The understanding of planet formation has changed recently, embracing the new idea of pebble accretion. This means that the influx of pebbles from the outer regions of planet-forming disks to their inner zones could determine the composition of planets and their atmospheres. The solid and molecular components delivered to the planet-forming region can be best characterized by mid-infrared spectroscopy. With Spitzer low-resolution ( R = 100, 600) spectroscopy, this approach was limited to the detection of abundant molecules, such as H 2 O, C 2 H 2 , HCN and CO 2 . This contribution will present the first results of the MINDS (MIRI mid-INfrared Disk Survey, PI:Th Henning) project. Due do the sensitivity and spectral resolution provided by the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), we now have a unique tool to obtain the full inventory of chemistry in the inner disks of solar-type stars and brown dwarfs, including also less-abundant hydrocarbons and isotopologues. The Integral Field Unit (IFU) capabilities will enable at the same time spatial studies of the continuum and line emission in extended sources such as debris disks, the flying saucer and also the search for mid-IR signatures of forming planets in systems such as PDS 70. These JWST observations are complementary to ALMA and NOEMA observations of outer-disk chemistry; together these datasets will provide an integral view of the processes occurring during the planet-formation phase.
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