SIMBAD references

2019MNRAS.486.5552B - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 486, 5552-5557 (2019/July-2)

Sub-millimetre non-contaminated detection of the disc around TWA 7 by ALMA.

BAYO A., OLOFSSON J., MATRA L., BEAMIN J.C., GALLARDO J., DE GREGORIO-MONSALVO I., BOOTH M., ZAMORA C., IGLESIAS D., HENNING T., SCHREIBER M.R. and CACERES C.

Abstract (from CDS):

Debris discs can be seen as the leftovers of giant planet formation and the possible nurseries of rocky planets. While M-type stars outnumber more massive stars we know very little about the time evolution of their circumstellar discs at ages older than ∼10 Myr. Sub-millimetre observations are best to provide first order estimates of the available mass reservoir and thus better constrain the evolution of such discs. Here, we present ALMA Cycle 3 Band 7 observations of the debris disc around the M2 star TWA 7, which had been postulated to harbour two spatially separated dust belts, based on unresolved far-infrared and sub-millimetre data. We show that most of the emission at wavelengths longer than ∼300 µm is in fact arising from a contaminant source, most likely a sub-mm galaxy, located at about 6.6 arcsec east of TWA 7 (in 2016). Fortunately, the high resolution of our ALMA data allows us to disentangle the contaminant emission from that of the disc and report a significant detection of the disc in the sub-millimetre for the first time with a flux density of 2.1 ± 0.4 mJy at 870 µ m. With this detection, we show that the spectral energy distribution can be reproduced with a single dust belt.

Abstract Copyright: © 2019 The Author(s) Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society

Journal keyword(s): stellar matter - stars: individual: TWA 7 - stars: low-mass

Simbad objects: 8

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2023.06.05-01:30:13

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