SIMBAD references

2022A&A...664A.122O - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 664A, 122-122 (2022/8-1)

The halo around HD 32297: µm-sized cometary dust.

OLOFSSON J., THEBAULT P., KENNEDY G.M. and BAYO A.

Abstract (from CDS):


Context. The optical properties of the second generation dust that we observe in debris disks remain quite elusive, whether it is the absorption efficiencies at millimeter wavelengths or the (un)polarized phase function at near-infrared wavelengths. Thankfully, the same particles are experiencing forces that are size dependent (e.g., radiation pressure) and, with high angular resolution observations, we can take advantage of this natural spatial segregation.
Aims. Observations at different wavelengths probe different ranges of sizes; millimeter observations trace the larger grains, while near-infrared observations are sensitive to the other extreme of the size distribution. Consequently, there is a great synergy in combining both observational techniques to better constrain the optical properties of the particles.
Methods. We present a new approach to simultaneously model observations from"Spectro-Polarimetric High Contrast Exoplanet REsearch" (SPHERE) and the"Atacama Large Millimeter Array" (ALMA) and apply it to the debris disk around HD 32297, putting the emphasis on the spatial distribution of the grains with different β values. This modeling approach requires few assumptions on the actual sizes of the particles and the interpretation can therefore be done a posteriori.
Results. We find that the ALMA observations are best reproduced with a combination of small and large β values (0.03 and 0.42) while the SPHERE observations require several intervals of β values. We discuss the nature of the halo previously reported in ALMA observations, and hypothesize it could be caused by over-abundant µm-sized particles (the over-abundance being the consequence of their extended lifetime). We modeled the polarized phase function at near-infrared wavelengths, and fluffy aggregates larger than a few µm provide the best solution.
Conclusions. Comparing our results with comets of the Solar System, we postulate that the particles released in the disk originate from rather pristine cometary bodies (to avoid compaction of the fluffy aggregates) and they are then set on highly eccentric orbits, which could explain the halo detected at long wavelengths.

Abstract Copyright: © J. Olofsson et al. 2022

Journal keyword(s): circumstellar matter - techniques: high angular resolution - techniques: polarimetric

Simbad objects: 3

goto Full paper

goto View the references in ADS

To bookmark this query, right click on this link: simbad:2022A&A...664A.122O and select 'bookmark this link' or equivalent in the popup menu