Free access article
A&A 400, 185-202 (2003)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20021037
The vertical structure of T Tauri accretion discs
III. Consistent interpretation of spectra and visibilities with a two-layer model
R. Lachaume1, F. Malbet1 and J.-L. Monin1, 2
1
Laboratoire d'Astrophysique UMR UJF-CNRS 5571,
Observatoire de Grenoble,
Université Joseph Fourier, BP 53,
38041 Grenoble Cedex 9,
France
2
Institut Universitaire de France
(Received 27 May 2002 / Accepted 10 December 2002 )
Abstract
We present a two-layer accretion disc model developed to simultaneously fit
optical long baseline visibilities and spectral energy distributions of
T Tauri accretion discs. This model allows us to access easily the physical
conditions in the disc as the mid-plane or the surface temperature.
Our model includes viscous heating, absorption of stellar
irradiation, and
thermalisation with the surrounding medium. The disc is modelled with
concentric cylinders for which the vertical radiation transfer is computed
using two layers with vertically averaged temperatures: the outer layer is
heated by the stellar irradiation and by the inner layer, and the inner layer
by viscous dissipation and by the outer layer. We investigate three
prescriptions for the geometrical thickness of the disc: it is either
proportional the scale height (model 1), given ad hoc (model 2), or zero
(model 3). We then derive the disc structure in the case of the

and

viscosity prescriptions, as well as for various optical thickness
regimes of the disc.
This analytical model allows us to disentangle regions where the mid-plane
temperature and the effective temperature are dominated by accretion from
regions dominated by reprocessing of stellar light. In the case of

-prescription, we find that the structure of model 2 gives
predictions very close to those of numerical simulations from previous authors.
From the disc structure, we derive the spectral
energy distributions, images
and interferometric visibilities. We analyse the influence of the disc
parameters on the resulting structure and on the observable outputs. We apply
our model to interpret consistently the spectral energy distributions and
visibilities of SU Aur and FU Ori for which interferometric data are available,
and that are not known to be part of a multiple system. We were not
able to derive a consistent fit for T Tau North, which might come from caveats
in the flux correction from its South component, but were able to separately
derive fits for its spectrum and its visibilities.
We find that even a single interferometric measurement at one infrared
wavelength can bring a very strong constraint on disc models. We predict that
future massive interferometric observations of accretion discs will provide a
breakthrough in the understanding of accretion disc physics.
Key words:
stars: pre-main sequence
-- stars: circumstellar matter
--
accretion, accretion disks
--
methods: analytical
-- methods: numerical
-- methods: data analysis
Offprint request: R. Lachaume,
Regis.Lachaume@obs.ujf-grenoble.fr
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