No Arabic abstract
During the evolution of protoplanetary disks into planetary systems we expect to detect signatures that trace mechanisms such as planet-disk interaction. Protoplanetary disks display a large variety of structures in recently published high-spatial resolution images. However, the three-dimensional morphology of these disks is often difficult to infer from the two-dimensional projected images we observe. We spatially resolve the disk around HD 34282 using VLT/SPHERE in polarimetric imaging mode. We retrieve a profile for the height of the scattering surface to create a height-corrected deprojection, which simulates a face-on orientation. The disk displays a complex scattering surface. An inner clearing or cavity extending up to r<0.28 (88 au) is surrounded by a bright inclined (i = 56 deg) ring with a position angle of 119 deg. The center of this ring is offset from the star along the minor axis with 0.07, which can be explained with a disk-height of 26 au above the mid-plane. Outside this ring, beyond its south-eastern ansa we detect an azimuthal asymmetry or blob at r ~ 0.4. At larger separation, we detect an outer disk structure that can be fitted with an ellipse, compatible with a circular ring seen at r = 0.62 (190 au) and height of 77 au. After applying a height-corrected deprojection we see a circular ring centered on the star at 88 au, while what seemed to be a separate blob and outer ring, now both could be part of a single-armed spiral. Based on the current data it is not possible to conclude decisively whether $H_{rm scat} / r$ remains constant or whether the surface is flared with at most $H_{rm scat} propto r^{1.35}$ , although we favor the constant ratio based on our deprojections. The height-corrected deprojection allows a more detailed interpretation of the observed structures, after which we discern the detection of a single-armed spiral.
Spiral arms have been observed in more than a dozen protoplanetary disks, yet the origin of nearly all systems is under debate. Multi-epoch monitoring of spiral arm morphology offers a dynamical way in distinguishing two leading arm formation mechanisms: companion-driven, and gravitational instability induction, since these mechanisms predict distinct motion patterns. By analyzing multi-epoch J-band observations of the SAO 206462 system using the SPHERE instrument on the Very Large Telescope (VLT) in 2015 and 2016, we measure the pattern motion for its two prominent spiral arms in polarized light. On one hand, if both arms are comoving, they can be driven by a planet at $86_{-13}^{+18}$ au on a circular orbit, with gravitational instability motion ruled out. On the other hand, they can be driven by two planets at $120_{-30}^{+30}$ au and $49_{-5}^{+6}$ au, offering a tentative evidence (3.0$sigma$) that the two spirals are moving independently. The independent arm motion is possibly supported by our analysis of a re-reduction of archival observations using the NICMOS instrument onboard the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) in 1998 and 2005, yet artifacts including shadows can manifest spurious arm motion in HST observations. We expect future re-observations to better constrain the motion mechanism for the SAO 206462 spiral arms.
More than a dozen young stars host spiral arms in their surrounding protoplanetary disks. The excitation mechanisms of such arms are under debate. The two leading hypotheses -- companion-disk interaction and gravitational instability (GI) -- predict distinct motion for spirals. By imaging the MWC 758 spiral arm system at two epochs spanning ${sim}5$ yr using the SPHERE instrument on the Very Large Telescope (VLT), we test the two hypotheses for the first time. We find that the pattern speeds of the spirals are not consistent with the GI origin. Our measurements further evince the existence of a faint missing planet driving the disk arms. The average spiral pattern speed is $0.!^circ22pm0.!^circ03$ yr$^{-1}$, pointing to a driver at $172_{-14}^{+18}$ au around a $1.9$ $M_odot$ central star if it is on a circular orbit. In addition, we witness time varying shadowing effects on a global scale that are likely originated from an inner disk.
[Full abstract in the paper] In recent years, protoplanetary disks with spiral structures have been detected in scattered light, millimeter continuum, and CO gas emission. The mechanisms causing these structures are still under debate. A popular scenario to drive the spiral arms is the one of a planet perturbing the material in the disk. However, if the disk is massive, gravitational instability is usually the favored explanation. Multiwavelength studies could be helpful to distinguish between the two scenarios. So far, only a handful of disks with spiral arms have been observed in both scattered light and millimeter continuum. We aim to perform an in-depth characterization of the protoplanetary disk morphology around WaOph 6 analyzing data obtained at different wavelengths, as well as to investigate the origin of the spiral features in the disk. We present the first near-infrared polarimetric observations of WaOph 6 obtained with SPHERE at the VLT and compare them to archival millimeter continuum ALMA observations. We traced the spiral features in both data sets and estimated the respective pitch angles. We discuss the different scenarios that can give rise to the spiral arms in WaOph 6. We tested the planetary perturber hypothesis by performing hydrodynamical and radiative transfer simulations to compare them with scattered light and millimeter continuum observations.
PDS70 is a unique system in which two protoplanets, PDS70b and c, have been discovered within the dust-depleted cavity of their disk, at $sim$22 and 34au respectively, by direct imaging at infrared wavelengths. Subsequent detection of the planets in the H$alpha$ line indicates that they are still accreting material through circumplanetary disks. In this Letter, we present new Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) observations of the dust continuum emission at 855$mu$m at high angular resolution ($sim$20mas, 2.3au) that aim to resolve the circumplanetary disks and constrain their dust masses. Our observations confirm the presence of a compact source of emission co-located with PDS70c, spatially separated from the circumstellar disk and less extended than $sim$1.2au in radius, a value close to the expected truncation radius of the cicumplanetary disk at a third of the Hill radius. The emission around PDS70c has a peak intensity of $sim$86$pm$16 $mu mathrm{Jy}~mathrm{beam}^{-1}$ which corresponds to a dust mass of $sim$0.031M$_{oplus}$ or $sim$0.007M$_{oplus}$, assuming that it is only constituted of 1 $mu$m or 1 mm sized grains, respectively. We also detect extended, low surface brightness continuum emission within the cavity near PDS70b. We observe an optically thin inner disk within 18au of the star with an emission that could result from small micron-sized grains transported from the outer disk through the orbits of b and c. In addition, we find that the outer disk resolves into a narrow and bright ring with a faint inner shoulder.
We present $L^prime$-band Keck/NIRC2 imaging and $H$-band Subaru/AO188+HiCIAO polarimetric observations of CQ Tau disk with a new spiral arm. Apart from the spiral feature our observations could not detect any companion candidates. We traced the spiral feature from the $r^2$-scaled HiCIAO polarimetric intensity image and the fitted result is used for forward modeling to reproduce the ADI-reduced NIRC2 image. We estimated the original surface brightness after throughput correction in $L^prime$-band to be $sim126$ mJy/arcsec$^2$ at most. We suggest that the grain temperature of the spiral may be heated up to $sim$200 K in order to explain both of the $H$- and $L^{prime}$-bands results. The $H$-band emission at the location of the spiral originates from the scattering from the disk surface while both scattering and thermal emission may contribute to the $L^{prime}$-band emission. If the central star is only the light source of scattered light, the spiral emission at $L^prime$-band should be thermal emission. If an inner disk also acts as the light source, the scattered light and the thermal emission may equally contribute to the $L^prime$-band spiral structure.