Exploring DCO$^+$ as a tracer of thermal inversion in the disk around the Herbig Ae star HD163296
Abstract: We aim to reproduce the DCO$+$ emission in the disk around HD163296 using a simple 2D chemical model for the formation of DCO$+$ through the cold deuteration channel and a parametric treatment of the warm deuteration channel. We use data from ALMA in band 6 to obtain a resolved spectral imaging data cube of the DCO$+$ $J$=3--2 line in HD163296 with a synthesized beam of 0."53$\times$ 0."42. We adopt a physical structure of the disk from the literature that reproduces the spectral energy distribution. We then apply a simplified chemical network for the formation of DCO$+$ that uses the physical structure of the disk as parameters along with a CO abundance profile, a constant HD abundance and a constant ionization rate. Finally, from the resulting DCO$+$ abundances, we calculate the non-LTE emission using the 3D radiative transfer code LIME. The observed DCO$+$ emission is reproduced by a model with cold deuteration producing abundances up to $1.6\times 10{-11}$. Warm deuteration, at a constant abundance of $3.2\times 10{-12}$, becomes fully effective below 32 K and tapers off at higher temperatures, reproducing the lack of DCO$+$ inside 90 AU. Throughout the DCO$+$ emitting zone a CO abundance of $2\times 10{-7}$ is found, with $\sim$99\% of it frozen out below 19 K. At radii where both cold and warm deuteration are active, warm deuteration contributes up to 20\% of DCO$+$, consistent with detailed chemical models. The decrease of DCO$+$ at large radii is attributed to a temperature inversion at 250 AU, which raises temperatures above values where cold deuteration operates. Increased photodesorption may also limit the radial extent of DCO$+$. The corresponding return of the DCO$+$ layer to the midplane, together with a radially increasing ionization fraction, reproduces the local DCO$+$ emission maximum at $\sim$260 AU.
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