Constraints on the physical origin of large cavities in transition disks from multi-wavelength dust continuum emission
The physical origin of the large cavities observed in transition disks is to date still unclear. Different physical mechanisms (e.g., a companion, dead zones, enhanced grain growth) produce disk cavities of different depth, and the expected spatial distribution of gas and solids in each mechanism is...
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Zusammenfassung: | The physical origin of the large cavities observed in transition disks is to
date still unclear. Different physical mechanisms (e.g., a companion, dead
zones, enhanced grain growth) produce disk cavities of different depth, and the
expected spatial distribution of gas and solids in each mechanism is not the
same. In this work, we analyze the multi-wavelength interferometric
visibilities of dust continuum observations obtained with ALMA and VLA for six
transition disks: CQTau, UXTau A, LkCa15, RXJ1615, SR24S, and DMTau, and
calculate brightness radial profiles, where diverse emission morphology is
revealed at different wavelengths. The multi-wavelength data is used to model
the spectral energy distribution and compute constraints on the radial profile
of the dust surface density, maximum grain size, and dust temperature in each
disk. They are compared with the observational signatures expected from various
physical mechanisms responsible for disk cavities. The observational signatures
suggest that the cavities observed in the disks around UXTau A, LkCa15, and
RXJ1615 could potentially originate from a dust trap created by a companion.
Conversely, in the disks around CQTau, SR24S, DMTau, the origin of the cavity
remains unclear, although it is compatible with a pressure bump and grain
growth within the cavity. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2408.15407 |