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Scattered light imaging has revealed nearly a dozen circumstellar disks around young Herbig Ae/Be stars$-$enabling studies of structures in the upper disk layers as potential signs of on-going planet formation. We present the first images of the disk around the variable Herbig Ae star PDS 201 (V* V351 Ori), and an analysis of the images and spectral energy distribution through 3D Monte-Carlo radiative transfer simulations and forward modelling. The disk is detected in three datasets with LBTI/LMIRCam at the LBT, including direct observations in the $Ks$ and $L$ filters, and an $L$ observation with the 360$^circ$ vector apodizing phase plate coronagraph. The scattered light disk extends to a very large radius of $sim$250 au, which places it among the largest of such disks. Exterior to the disk, we establish detection limits on substellar companions down to $sim$5 M$_{Jup}$ at $gtrsim$1.5 ($gtrsim$500 au), assuming the Baraffe et al. (2015) models. The images show a radial gap extending to $sim$0.4 ($sim$140 au at a distance of 340 pc) that is also evident in the spectral energy distribution. The large gap is a possible signpost of multiple high-mass giant planets at orbital distances ($sim$60-100 au) that are unusually massive and widely-separated compared to those of planet populations previously inferred from protoplanetary disk substructures.
We present high resolution H-band polarized intensity (PI; FWHM = 0.1: 14 AU) and L-band imaging data (FWHM = 0.11: 15 AU) of the circumstellar disk around the weak-lined T Tauri star PDS 70 in Centaurus at a radial distance of 28 AU (0.2) up to 210
The disk around the Herbig Ae/Be star HD 100546 has been extensively studied and it is one of the systems for which there are observational indications of ongoing and/or recent planet formation. However, up until now no resolved image of the millimet
We report the discovery of a dwarf protoplanetary disk around the star XZ Tau B that shows all the features of a classical transitional disk but on a much smaller scale. The disk has been imaged with the Atacama Large Millimeter/Submillimeter Array (
The protoplanetary disk around HL Tau is so far the youngest candidate of planet formation, and it is still embedded in a protostellar envelope with a size of thousands of au. In this work, we study the gas kinematics in the envelope and its possible
Theoretical models and spectroscopic observations of newborn stars suggest that protoplantary disks have an inner wall at a distance set by the disk interaction with the star. Around T Tauri stars, the size of this disk hole is expected to be on a 0.