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Polarimetric imaging of large cavity structures in the pre-transitional protoplanetary disk around PDS 70: observations of the disk

Authors :
Michael W. McElwain
Tomonori Usuda
Mitsuhiko Honda
Zhaohuan Zhu
Melissa McClure
Carol A. Grady
Markus Janson
Lyu Abe
Miki Ishii
Yutaka Hayano
Masao Hayashi
Ryuji Suzuki
Takuya Suenaga
Naruhisa Takato
John P. Wisniewski
Edwin L. Turner
Jungmi Kwon
Christian Thalmann
Klaus W. Hodapp
Yasuhiro H. Takahashi
Taro Matsuo
Michihiro Takami
Tomoyuki Kudo
Gene Serabyn
Timothy D. Brandt
Misato Fukagawa
Shoken Miyama
Masanori Iye
Masayuki Kuzuhara
Hiroshi Terada
Tetsuro Nishimura
Saeko S. Hayashi
Satoshi Mayama
Joseph C. Carson
Ryo Kandori
Makoto Watanabe
Miwa Goto
Markus Feldt
Hideki Takami
Tae-Soo Pyo
Olivier Guyon
Hiroshi Suto
Motohide Tamura
Toru Yamada
G. R. Knapp
Nobuhiko Kusakabe
Jun-Ichi Morino
Jun Hashimoto
Daigo Tomono
Takayuki Muto
Thomas Henning
Sebastian Egner
Amaya Moro-Martin
Wolfgang Brandner
Ruobing Dong
Low Energy Astrophysics (API, FNWI)
Source :
Astrophysical Journal Letters, 758(1):L19. IOP Publishing Ltd.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

We present high resolution H-band polarized intensity (PI; FWHM = 0."1: 14 AU) and L'-band imaging data (FWHM = 0."11: 15 AU) of the circumstellar disk around the weak-lined T Tauri star PDS 70 in Centaurus at a radial distance of 28 AU (0."2) up to 210 AU (1."5). In both images, a giant inner gap is clearly resolved for the first time, and the radius of the gap is ~70 AU. Our data show that the geometric center of the disk shifts by ~6 AU toward the minor axis. We confirm that the brown dwarf companion candidate to the north of PDS 70 is a background star based on its proper motion. As a result of SED fitting by Monte Carlo radiative transfer modeling, we infer the existence of an optically thick inner disk at a few AU. Combining our observations and modeling, we classify the disk of PDS 70 as a pre-transitional disk. Furthermore, based on the analysis of L'-band imaging data, we put an upper limit mass of companions at ~30 to ~50MJ within the gap. Taking account of the presence of the large and sharp gap, we suggest that the gap could be formed by dynamical interactions of sub-stellar companions or multiple unseen giant planets in the gap.<br />accepted by APJL

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20418205
Volume :
758
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Astrophysical Journal Letters
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2033f4e6895e15adc57a23be794264c6