IMAGING THE INNER AND OUTER GAPS OF THE PRE-TRANSITIONAL DISK OF HD 169142 AT 7 mm

DOI: 
10.1088/2041-8205/791/2/L36
Publication date: 
20/08/2014
Main author: 
Osorio, Mayra
IAA authors: 
Osorio, Mayra; Anglada, Guillem; Macias, Enrique; Gomez, Jose F.; Mayen-Gijon, Juan M.
Authors: 
Osorio, Mayra; Anglada, Guillem; Carrasco-Gonzalez, Carlos; Torrelles, Jose M.; Macias, Enrique; Rodriguez, Luis F.; Gomez, Jose F.; D'Alessio, Paola; Calvet, Nuria; Nagel, Erick; Dent, William R. F.; Quanz, Sascha P.; Reggiani, Maddalena; Mayen-Gijon, Juan M.
Journal: 
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS
Publication type: 
Article
Volume: 
791
Pages: 
Number: 
L36
Abstract: 
We present Very Large Array observations at 7 mm that trace the thermal emission of large dust grains in the HD 169142 protoplanetary disk. Our images show a ring of enhanced emission of radius similar to 25-30 AU, whose inner region is devoid of detectable 7 mm emission. We interpret this ring as tracing the rim of an inner cavity or gap, possibly created by a planet or a substellar companion. The ring appears asymmetric, with the western part significantly brighter than the eastern one. This azimuthal asymmetry is reminiscent of the lopsided structures that are expected to be produced as a consequence of trapping of large dust grains. Our observations also reveal an outer annular gap at radii from similar to 40 to similar to 70 AU. Unlike other sources, the radii of the inner cavity, the ring, and the outer gap observed in the 7 mm images, which trace preferentially the distribution of large (millimeter/centimeter sized) dust grains, coincide with those obtained from a previous near-infrared polarimetric image, which traces scattered light from small (micron-sized) dust grains. We model the broadband spectral energy distribution and the 7 mm images to constrain the disk physical structure. From this modeling we infer the presence of a small (radius similar to 0.6 AU) residual disk inside the central cavity, indicating that the HD 169142 disk is a pre-transitional disk. The distribution of dust in three annuli with gaps in between them suggests that the disk in HD 169142 is being disrupted by at least two planets or substellar objects.
Database: 
WOK
SCOPUS
ADS
URL: 
https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/#abs/2014ApJ...791L..36O/abstract
ADS Bibcode: 
2014ApJ...791L..36O
Keywords: 
planet-disk interactions; protoplanetary disks; stars: formation; stars: individual (HD 169142); stars: pre-main sequence