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Mid-infrared Studies of HD 113766 and HD 172555: Assessing Variability in the Terrestrial Zone of Young Exoplanetary Systems

Authors :
Su, Kate Y. L.
Rieke, George H.
Melis, Carl
Jackson, Alan P.
Smith, Paul S.
Meng, Huan Y. A.
Gaspar, Andras
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

We present multi-epoch infrared photometry and spectroscopy obtained with warm Spitzer, Subaru and SOFIA to assess variability for the young ($\sim$20 Myr) and dusty debris systems around HD 172555 and HD 113766A. No variations (within 0.5%) were found for the former at either 3.6 or 4.5 $\mu$m, while significant non-periodic variations (peak-to-peak of $\sim$10-15% relative to the primary star) were detected for the latter. Relative to the Spitzer IRS spectra taken in 2004, multi-epoch mid-infrared spectra reveal no change in either the shape of the prominent 10 $\mu$m solid-state features or the overall flux levels (no more than 20%) for both systems, corroborating that the population of sub-$\mu$m-sized grains that produce the pronounced solid-state features is stable over a decadal timescale. We suggest that these sub-$\mu$m-sized grains were initially generated in an optically thick clump of debris of mm-sized vapor condensates resulting from a recent violent impact between large asteroidal or planetary bodies. Because of the shielding from the stellar photons provided by this clump, intense collisions led to an over-production of fine grains that would otherwise be ejected from the system by radiation pressure. As the clump is sheared by its orbital motion and becomes optically thin, a population of very fine grains could remain in stable orbits until Poynting-Robertson drag slowly spirals them into the star. We further suggest that the 3-5 $\mu$m disk variation around HD 113766A is consistent with a clump/arc of such fine grains on a modestly eccentric orbit in its terrestrial zone.<br />Comment: to be published in ApJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2006.06590
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ab9c9b