SIMBAD references

2023MNRAS.526.2077A - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 526, 2077-2085 (2023/December-1)

Radio-continuum decrements associated to shadowing from the central warp in transition disc DoAr 44.

ARCE-TORD C., CASASSUS S., DENT W.R.F., PEREZ S., CARCAMO M., WEBER P., ENGLER N., CIEZA L.A., HALES A., ZURLO A. and MARINO S.

Abstract (from CDS):

Warps have often been used to explain disc properties, but well-characterized examples are important due to their role in disc evolution. Scattered light images of discs with central gaps have revealed sharp warps, such that the outer rings are shadowed by tilted inner discs. The near-infrared intensity drops along the ring around T-Tauri star DoAr 44 have been interpreted in terms of a central warp. We report new ALMA observations of DoAr 44 in the continuum at 230 and 350 GHz (at ∼10 au), along with a new epoch of Spectro Polarimetric High-contrast Exoplanet REsearch (SPHERE)/Infrared Dual-band Imager and Spectrograph differential polarized imaging taken during excellent weather conditions. The ALMA observations resolve the ring and confirm the decrements proposed from deconvolution of coarse 336 GHz data. The scattered light image constrains the dips, which correspond to a misaligned inner disc with a relative inclination ξ = 21.4 $^{+6.7}_{-8.3}$ deg. The SPHERE intensity profile shows a morphological change compared to a previous epoch that may be interpreted as a variable orientation of the inner disc, from ξ ∼ 30 deg to ξ ∼ 20 deg. The intensity dips probably correspond to temperature decrements, as their mm-spectral index, $\alpha ^{230 \textrm {GHz}}_{350 \textrm {GHz}} \sim$ 2.0 ± 0.1, is indicative of optically thick emission. The azimuth of the two temperature decrements are leading clockwise relative to the infrared-dips, by η = 14.95 deg and η = 7.92 deg. For a retrograde disc, such shifts are expected from a thermal lag and imply gas surface densities of Σg = 117 ± 10 g cm–2 and Σg = 48 ± 10 g cm–2. A lopsided disc, with contrast ratio fr = 2.4 ± 0.5, is also consistent with the large continuum crescent.

Abstract Copyright: © 2023 The Author(s) Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Royal Astronomical Society

Journal keyword(s): planet-disc interactions - protoplanetary discs

Simbad objects: 11

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