Investigating dust trapping in transition disks with millimeter-wave polarization


Abstract in English

Spatially resolved polarized (sub-)mm emission has been observed for example in the protoplanetary disk around HL Tau. Magnetically aligned grains are commonly interpreted as the source of polarization. However, self-scattering by large dust grains with a high enough albedo is another polarization mechanism, becoming a compelling method independent of the spectral index to constrain the dust grain size in protoplanetary disks. We study the dust polarization at mm wavelength in the dust trapping scenario proposed for transition disks, when a giant planet opens a gap in the disk. We investigate the characteristic polarization patterns and their dependence on disk inclination, dust size evolution, planet position, and observing wavelength. We combine two-dimensional hydrodynamical simulations of planet-disk interactions with self-consistent dust growth models. These size-dependent dust density distributions are used for follow-up three-dimensional radiative transfer calculations to predict the polarization degree at ALMA bands due to scattered thermal emission. We find that the polarization pattern of a disk with a planetary gap after 1 Myr of dust evolution shows a distinctive three ring structure. Two narrow inner rings are located at the planet gap edges. For increasing observing wavelengths all three rings slightly change their position, where the innermost and outermost rings move inward. This distance is detectable comparing the results at ALMA bands 3, 6 and 7. Within the highest polarized intensity regions the polarization vectors are oriented in the azimuthal direction. For an inclined disk there is an interplay between polarization originating from a flux gradient and inclination-induced quadrupole polarization. For intermediate inclined transition disks the polarization degree is as high as ~ 2% at band 3, which is well above the detection limit of future ALMA observations.

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