2019ApJ...875...87D


Query : 2019ApJ...875...87D

2019ApJ...875...87D - Astrophys. J., 875, 87-87 (2019/April-3)

The mass of stirring bodies in the AU Mic debris disk inferred from resolved vertical structure.

DALEY C., HUGHES A.M., CARTER E.S., FLAHERTY K., LAMBROS Z., PAN M., SCHLICHTING H., CHIANG E., WYATT M., WILNER D., ANDREWS S. and CARPENTER J.

Abstract (from CDS):

The vertical distribution of dust in debris disks is sensitive to the number and size of large planetesimals dynamically stirring the disk, and is therefore well-suited for constraining the prevalence of otherwise unobservable Uranus and Neptune analogs. Information regarding stirring bodies has previously been inferred from infrared and optical observations of debris disk vertical structure, but theoretical works predict that the small particles traced by short-wavelength observations will be "puffed up" by radiation pressure, yielding only upper limits. The large grains that dominate the disk emission at millimeter wavelengths are much less sensitive to the effects of stellar radiation or stellar winds, and therefore trace the underlying mass distribution more directly. Here we present ALMA 1.3 mm dust continuum observations of the debris disk around the nearby M star AU Mic. The 3 au spatial resolution of the observations, combined with the favorable edge-on geometry of the system, allows us to measure the vertical thickness of the disk. We report a scale height-to-radius aspect ratio of h=0.031–0.004+0.005 between radii of ∼23 au and ∼41 au. Comparing this aspect ratio to a theoretical model of size-dependent velocity distributions in the collisional cascade, we find that the perturbing bodies embedded in the local disk must be larger than about 400 km, and the largest perturbing body must be smaller than roughly 1.8 M. These measurements rule out the presence of a gas giant or Neptune analog near the ∼40 au outer edge of the debris ring, but are suggestive of large planetesimals or an Earth-sized planet stirring the dust distribution.

Abstract Copyright: © 2019. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

Journal keyword(s): circumstellar matter - planet-disk interactions - planetary systems - stars: individual: AU Mic - submillimeter: planetary systems

Simbad objects: 10

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Number of rows : 10
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 * bet Pic PM* 05 47 17.0876901 -51 03 59.441135 4.13 4.03 3.86 3.74 3.58 A6V 1905 1
2 HD 109573 PM* 12 36 01.0317461592 -39 52 10.220465388   5.786 5.774 7.25 5.81 A0V 634 1
3 NAME Proxima Centauri Er* 14 29 42.9461331854 -62 40 46.164680672 14.21 12.95 11.13 9.45 7.41 M5.5Ve 1299 0
4 NAME beta Pic Moving Group MGr 14 30 -42.0           ~ 774 0
5 HD 181327 PM* 19 22 58.9437222504 -54 32 16.975668624   7.50 7.04   6.49 F6V 286 0
6 QSO B1921-293 BLL 19 24 51.05595254 -29 14 30.1210248   18.71 18.21 15.07   ~ 868 0
7 HD 197481 BY* 20 45 09.5324974119 -31 20 27.237889841   10.05 8.627 9.078 6.593 M1VeBa1 1153 0
8 QSO B2052-474 Bla 20 56 16.35980507 -47 14 47.6277179   18.29 19.1 18.07   ~ 316 1
9 ICRF J205625.0-320847 BLL 20 56 25.07022954 -32 08 47.8002638   20.5   17.60   ~ 29 0
10 QSO B2058-297 QSO 21 01 01.65998656 -29 33 27.8362907   18 18 18.90   ~ 59 1

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