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Imaging the Key Stages of Planet Formation

Authors :
John Monnier
Gioia Rau
Joel Sanchez‐Bermudez
Sam Ragland
Rachel Akeson
Gerard van Belle
Ryan Norris
Kathryn Gordon
Denis Defrère
Jacques Kluska
Stephen Ridgway
Jean‐Baptiste Le Bouquin
Narsireddy Anugu
Nicholas Sco
Stephen Kane
Noel D Richardson
Zsolt Regaly
Zhaohuan Zhu
Gautam Vasisht
Keivan G. Stassun
Sean Andrews
Sylvestre Lacour
Gerd Weigelt
Neal Turner
Fred C Adams
Douglas Gies
Nuria Calvet
Catherine Espaillat
Rafael Millan‐Gabet
Tyler Gardner
Chris Packham
Mario Gai
Quentin Kral
Jean‐Philippe Berger
Hendrik Linz
Lucia Klarmann
Matthew Bate
Jaehan Bae
Rebeca Garcia Lopez
Antonio Garufi
Fabien Baron
Mihkel Kama
David Wilner
Lee Hartmann
Makoto Kishimoto
Johan Olofsson
Melissa McClure
Chris Haniff
Sebastian Hoenig
Michael Line
Romain G. Petrov
Michael Smith
Theo ten Brummelaar
Matthew De Furio
Maria Koutoulaki
Stephen Rinehart
David Leisawitz
William C Danchi
Daniel Huber
Ke Zhang
Benjamin Pope
Michael Ireland
Stefan Kraus
Andrea Isella
Benjamin Setterholm
Russel White
Source :
Astrophysics > Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics.
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2019.

Abstract

New images of young stars are revolutionizing our understanding of planet formation. ALMA detects large grains in planet‐forming disks with few AU scale resolution and scattered light imaging with extreme adaptive optics systems reveal small grains suspended on the disks’ flared surfaces. Tantalizing evidence for young exoplanets is emerging from line observations of CO and H‐alpha. In this white paper, we explore how even higher angular resolution can extend our understanding of the key stages of planet formation, to resolve accreting circumplanetary disks themselves, and to watch planets forming in situ for the nearest star‐forming regions. We focus on infrared observations which are sensitive to thermal emission in the terrestrial planet formation zone and allow access to molecular tracers in warm ro‐vibrational states. Successful planet formation theories will not only be able to explain the diverse features seen in disks, but will also be consistent with the rich exoplanet demographics from RV and transit surveys. While we are far from exhausting ground‐based techniques, the ultimate combination of high angular resolution and high infrared sensitivity can only be achieved through mid‐infrared space interferometry.

Subjects

Subjects :
Astronomy

Details

Language :
English
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Journal :
Astrophysics > Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics
Notes :
80GSFC17M0002
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20205000775
Document Type :
Report