Status Report

The circumstellar disk HD169142: gas, dust and planets acting in concert?

By SpaceRef Editor
October 24, 2017
Filed under , , ,

A. Pohl, M. Benisty, P. Pinilla, C. Ginski, J. de Boer, H. Avenhaus, Th. Henning, A. Zurlo, A. Bocaletti, J.-C. Augereau, T. Birnstiel, C. Dominik, S. Facchini, D. Fedele, M. Janson, M. Keppler, Q. Kral, M. Langlois, R. Ligi, A.-L. Maire, F. Ménard, M. Meyer, C. Pinte, S. P. Quanz, J.-F. Sauvage, É. Sezestre, T. Stolker, J. Szulágyi, R. van Boekel, G. van der Plas, A. Baruffolo, P. Baudoz, D. Le Mignant, D. Maurel, J. Ramos, L. Weber
(Submitted on 17 Oct 2017)

HD169142 is an excellent target to investigate signs of planet-disk interaction due to the previous evidence of gap structures. We performed J-band (~1.2{\mu}m) polarized intensity imaging of HD169142 with VLT/SPHERE. We observe polarized scattered light down to 0.16″ (~19 au) and find an inner gap with a significantly reduced scattered light flux. We confirm the previously detected double ring structure peaking at 0.18″ (~21 au) and 0.56″ (~66 au), and marginally detect a faint third gap at 0.70″-0.73″ (~82-85 au). We explore dust evolution models in a disk perturbed by two giant planets, as well as models with a parameterized dust size distribution. The dust evolution model is able to reproduce the ring locations and gap widths in polarized intensity, but fails to reproduce their depths. It, however, gives a good match with the ALMA dust continuum image at 1.3 mm. Models with a parameterized dust size distribution better reproduce the gap depth in scattered light, suggesting that dust filtration at the outer edges of the gaps is less effective. The pile-up of millimeter grains in a dust trap and the continuous distribution of small grains throughout the gap likely require a more efficient dust fragmentation and dust diffusion in the dust trap. Alternatively, turbulence or charging effects might lead to a reservoir of small grains at the surface layer that is not affected by the dust growth and fragmentation cycle dominating the dense disk midplane. The exploration of models shows that extracting planet properties such as mass from observed gap profiles is highly degenerate.

Comments:    21 pages, 14 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ
Subjects:    Earth and Planetary Astrophysics (astro-ph.EP)
Cite as:    arXiv:1710.06485 [astro-ph.EP] (or arXiv:1710.06485v1 [astro-ph.EP] for this version)
Submission history
From: Adriana Pohl
[v1] Tue, 17 Oct 2017 19:58:38 GMT (3282kb,D)
https://arxiv.org/abs/1710.06485

SpaceRef staff editor.