Published September 12, 2025
| Version v1
Poster
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Compact or large? CO observations of the faintest planet-forming disks
Description
Planet-forming disks observed by ALMA surveys often exhibit surprisingly faint continuum and
CO emission, raising doubts about whether these disks contain enough material to account for the
known exoplanet population. Despite this, the fainter end of the disk population - which shows
compact, unresolved continuum emission and non-detections in CO isotopologues - has received
little detailed investigation. It remains unclear whether this is due to faint but spatially extended
emission or intrinsically compact disk structures. Distinguishing between these scenarios is
crucial: if such disks are indeed compact, including their gaseous components, and optically thick,
their inner regions could harbor significant reservoirs of material, potentially capable of forming
gas giants within Jupiter's orbital radius. In this poster we present new ALMA data that target
13CO (3-2) and 12CO (3-2) lines in 18 CO-faint Lupus disks, probing the gaseous component
of the faintest planet-forming disks. If the observations confirm that these disks are radially
compact and optically thick, we could imply a substantial planet-forming capacity within 10 au
in a significant fraction of Lupus disks. Furthermore, if these disks are indeed compact, they
challenge widely accepted theories of disk evolution, such as viscous evolution and MHD-driven
processes, which cannot account for such small outer radii. Since Lupus is a young, low-density
star-forming region, external truncation processes are also unlikely to explain these compact
gaseous structures, further emphasising the need for a revised understanding of disk evolution.
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Giulia_Ricciardi_ESO_TNF2025_Zenodo.pdf
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