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First Scattered-Light Images of the Gas-Rich Debris Disk Around 49 Ceti

Authors :
Choquet, Elodie
Milli, Julien
Wahhaj, Zahed
Soummer, Remi
Roberge, Aki
Augereau, Jean-Charles
Booth, Mark
Absil, Olivier
Boccaletti, Anthony
Chen, Christine H
Debes, John H
Del Burgo, Carlos
Dent, William R. F
Ertel, Steve
Girard, Julien H
Gofas-Salas, Elena
Golimowski, David A
Gonzalez, Carlos A. Gomez
Hagan, J. Brendan
Hibon, Pascale
Hines, Dean C
Kennedy, Grant M
Lagrange, Anne-Marie
Matra, Luca
Mawet, Dimitri
Mouillet, David
N'Diaye, Mamadou
Perrin, Marshall D
Pinte, Christophe
Pueyo, Laurent
Rajan, Abhijith
Schneider, Glenn
Wolff, Schuyler
Wyatt, Mark
Source :
The Astrophysical Journal Letters. 834(2)
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2017.

Abstract

We present the first scattered-light images of the debris disk around 49 Ceti, a approximately 40 Myr A1 main-sequence star at 59 pc, famous for hosting two massive dust belts as well as large quantities of atomic and molecular gas. The outer disk is revealed in reprocessed archival Hubble Space Telescope NICMOS-F110W images, as well as new coronagraphic H-band images from the Very Large Telescope SPHERE instrument. The disk extends from 1."1 (65 au) to 4." 6 (250 au) and is seen at an inclination of 73 deg, which refines previous measurements at lower angular resolution. We also report no companion detection larger than 3 MJup at projected separations beyond 20 au from the star (0." 34). Comparison between the F110W and H-band images is consistent with a gray color of 49 Ceti's dust, indicating grains larger than approximately greater than 2 micrometers. Our photometric measurements indicate a scattering efficiency/infrared excess ratio of 0.2-0.4, relatively low compared to other characterized debris disks. We find that 49 Ceti presents morphological and scattering properties very similar to the gas-rich HD 131835 system. From our constraint on the disk inclination we find that the atomic gas previously detected in absorption must extend to the inner disk, and that the latter must be depleted of CO gas. Building on previous studies, we propose a schematic view of the system describing the dust and gas structure around 49 Ceti and hypothetical scenarios for the gas nature and origin.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20418213 and 20418205
Volume :
834
Issue :
2
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Journal :
The Astrophysical Journal Letters
Notes :
NAS5-26555, , ERC 337569, , CONACyT CB-2012-183007
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20170007786
Document Type :
Report
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/834/2/L12