2MASS J18314556-0218408 , the SIMBAD biblio

2016A&A...592A.126V - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 592A, 126-126 (2016/8-1)

The (w)hole survey: An unbiased sample study of transition disk candidates based on Spitzer catalogs.

VAN DER MAREL N., VERHAAR B.W., VAN TERWISGA S., MERIN B., HERCZEG G., LIGTERINK N.F.W. and VAN DISHOECK E.F.

Abstract (from CDS):

Understanding disk evolution and dissipation is essential for studies of planet formation. Transition disks, i.e., disks with large dust cavities and gaps, are promising candidates of active evolution. About two dozen candidates, selected by their spectral energy distribution (SED), have been confirmed to have dust cavities through millimeter interferometric imaging, but this sample is biased toward the brightest disks. The Spitzer surveys of nearby low-mass star-forming regions have resulted in more than 4000 young stellar objects. Using color criteria, we selected a sample of ∼150 candidates and an additional 40 candidates and known transition disks from the literature. The Spitzer data were complemented by new observations at longer wavelengths, including new JCMT and APEX submillimeter photometry, and WISE and Herschel-PACS mid- and far-infrared photometry. Furthermore, optical spectroscopy was obtained and stellar types were derived for 85% of the sample, including information from the literature. The SEDs were fit to a grid of RADMC-3D disk models with a limited number of parameters: disk mass, inner disk mass, scale height and flaring, and disk cavity radius, where the latter is the main parameter of interest. About 72% of our targets possibly have dust cavities based on the SED. The derived cavity sizes are consistent with imaging/modeling results in the literature, where available. Trends are found with Ldisk over L* ratio and stellar mass and a possible connection with exoplanet orbital radii. A comparison with a previous study where color observables are used reveals large overlap between their category of planet-forming disks and our transition disks with cavities. A large number of the new transition disk candidates are suitable for follow-up observations with ALMA.

Abstract Copyright: © ESO, 2016

Journal keyword(s): protoplanetary disks - planets and satellites: formation - planet-disk interactions

VizieR on-line data: <Available at CDS (J/A+A/592/A126): apex.dat jcmt.dat table.dat refs.dat>

Simbad objects: 237

goto View the references in ADS