The SHARDDS survey: First resolved image of the HD 114082 debris disk in the Lower Centaurus Crux with SPHERE
- Creators
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Wahhaj, Zahed
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Milli, Julien
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Kennedy, Grant
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Ertel, Steve
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Matrà, Luca
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Boccaletti, Anthony
- del Burgo, Carlos
- Wyatt, Mark
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Pinte, Christophe
- Lagrange, Anne-Marie
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Absil, Olivier
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Choquet, Élodie
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Gomez Gonzalez, Carlos A.
- Kobayashi, Hiroshi
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Mawet, Dimitri
- Mouillet, David
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Pueyo, Laurent
- Dent, William R. F.
- Augereau, Jean-Charles
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Girard, Julien
Abstract
We present the first resolved image of the debris disk around the 16 ± 8 Myr old star, HD 114082. The observation was made in the H-band using the SPHERE instrument. The star is at a distance of 92 ± 6 pc in the Lower Centaurus Crux association. Using a Markov chain Monte Carlo analysis, we determined that the debris is likely in the form of a dust ring with an inner edge of 27.7^(+2.8)_(-3.5) au, position angle –74.3°^(+0.5)_(-1.5), and an inclination with respect to the line of sight of 6.7°^(+3.8)_(-0.4). The disk imaged in scattered light has a surface density that is declining with radius of ~r-4, which is steeper than expected for grain blowout by radiation pressure. We find only marginal evidence (2σ) of eccentricity and rule out planets more massive than 1.0 M_(Jup) orbiting within 1 au of the inner edge of the ring, since such a planet would have disrupted the disk. The disk has roughly the same fractional disk luminosity (L_(disk)/L_∗ = 3.3 × 10^(-3)) as HR 4796 A and β Pictoris, however it was not detected by previous instrument facilities most likely because of its small angular size (radius ~0.4"), low albedo (~0.2), and low scattering efficiency far from the star due to high scattering anisotropy. With the arrival of extreme adaptive optics systems, such as SPHERE and GPI, the morphology of smaller, fainter, and more distant debris disks are being revealed, providing clues to planet-disk interactions in young protoplanetary systems.
Additional Information
© ESO, 2016. Received: 21 September 2016. Accepted: 7 November 2016. We would like to thank the ESO staff and the technical operators at the Paranal Observatory. O.A. is F.R.S.-FNRS Research Associate. O.A. and C.G.G. acknowledge support by the European Union through ERC grant number 337569. G.M.K. is supported by the Royal Society as a Royal Society University Research Fellow. C.B. has been supported by Mexican CONACyT research grant CB-2012-183007. E.C. acknowledges support for this work from NASA through Hubble Fellowship grant HST-HF2-51355 awarded by STScI, which is operated by the AURA, Inc., for NASA under contract NAS5-26555.Attached Files
Published - aa29769-16.pdf
Submitted - 1611.05866v1.pdf
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Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 73998
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20170203-071518784
- European Research Council (ERC)
- 337569
- Royal Society
- Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología (CONACYT)
- CB-2012-183007
- NASA Hubble Fellowship
- HST-HF2-51355
- Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC)
- NASA
- NAS5-26555
- Created
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2017-02-03Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2021-11-11Created from EPrint's last_modified field