2021A&A...653A..88A


Query : 2021A&A...653A..88A

2021A&A...653A..88A - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 653A, 88-88 (2021/9-1)

Characterizing the morphology of the debris disk around the low-mass star GSC 07396-00759.

ADAM C., OLOFSSON J., VAN HOLSTEIN R.G., BAYO A., MILLI J., BOCCALETTI A., KRAL Q., GINSKI C., HENNING T., MONTESINOS M., PAWELLEK N., ZURLO A., LANGLOIS M., DELBOULBE A., PAVLOV A., RAMOS J., WEBER L., WILDI F., RIGAL F. and SAUVAGE J.-F.

Abstract (from CDS):


Context. Debris disks have commonly been studied around intermediate-mass stars. Their intense radiation fields are believed to efficiently remove the small dust grains that are constantly replenished by collisions. For lower-mass central objects, in particular M stars, the dust removal mechanism needs to be further investigated given the much weaker radiation field produced by these objects.
Aims. We present new observations of the nearly edge-on disk around the pre-main-sequence M-type star GSC 07396-00759, taken with VLT/SPHERE IRDIS in dual-beam polarimetric imaging mode, with the aim to better understand the morphology of the disk, its dust properties, and the star-disk interaction via the stellar mass-loss rate.
Methods. We model the polarimetric observations to characterize the location and properties of the dust grains using the Henyey-Greenstein approximation of the polarized phase function. We use the estimated phase function to evaluate the strength of the stellar winds.
Results. We find that the polarized light observations are best described by an extended and highly inclined disk (i≃84.3°+/0.3) with a dust distribution centered at a radius r0≃107±2au. Our modeling suggests an anisotropic scattering factor g≃0.6 to best reproduce the polarized phase function S12. We also find that the phase function is reasonably well reproduced by small micron-sized dust grains with sizes s>0.3µm. We discuss some of the caveats of the approach, mainly that our model probably does not fully recover the semimajor axis of the disk and that we cannot readily determine all dust properties due to a degeneracy between the grain size and the porosity.
Conclusions. Even though the radius of the disk may be overestimated, our best-fit model not only reproduces the observations well but is also consistent with previous published data obtained in total intensity. Similarly to previous studies of debris disks, we suggest that using a given scattering theory might not be sufficient to fully explain key aspects, such as the shape of the phase function or the dust grain size. Taking into consideration the aforementioned caveats, we find that the average mass-loss rate of GSC 07396-00759 can be up to 500 times stronger than that of the Sun, supporting the idea that stellar winds from low-mass stars can evacuate small dust grains in an efficient way.

Abstract Copyright: © ESO 2021

Journal keyword(s): stars: individual: GSC 07396-00759 - stars: winds, outflows - circumstellar matter - radiative transfer - techniques: high angular resolution - techniques: photometric

Simbad objects: 56

goto Full paper

goto View the references in ADS

Number of rows : 56
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2023
#notes
1 HD 377 PM* 00 08 25.7454555168 +06 37 00.489407808   8.22 7.59   6.90 G2V 139 0
2 * 49 Cet PM* 01 34 37.7786780856 -15 40 34.898673000   5.667 5.607   5.54 A1V 287 0
3 HD 15115 PM* 02 26 16.2457848552 +06 17 33.186453252   7.15 6.80   6.33 F4IV 191 0
4 HD 15745 PM* 02 32 55.8109019904 +37 20 01.040152092   7.84 7.49   7.05 F0 75 0
5 * eps Eri BY* 03 32 55.8444911587 -09 27 29.739493865 5.19 4.61 3.73 3.00 2.54 K2V 1863 1
6 HD 30447 * 04 46 49.5286580976 -26 18 08.851615452   8.25 7.86   7.39 F3V 75 0
7 HD 32297 * 05 02 27.4358754192 +07 27 39.678553260   8.32 8.14     A0V 183 0
8 HD 35650 Ro* 05 24 30.1695408744 -38 58 10.747077852 11.54 10.365 9.054 8.293 7.577 K6V 89 0
9 HD 35841 * 05 26 36.5868254712 -22 29 23.735043744   9.37 8.90     F3V 31 0
10 HD 36546 * 05 33 30.7586857560 +24 37 43.728519504   7.02 6.95   6.90 B8 40 0
11 NAME lam Ori Complex SFR 05 35 06 +09 56.0           ~ 77 0
12 Cl Collinder 69 OpC 05 35 10.1 +09 48 47     2.8     ~ 299 0
13 * bet Pic PM* 05 47 17.0876901 -51 03 59.441135 4.13 4.03 3.86 3.74 3.58 A6V 1837 1
14 HD 53143 PM* 06 59 59.6550515452 -61 20 10.252631566 8.035 7.609 6.803 6.375 5.99 G9V 154 0
15 HD 61005 PM* 07 35 47.4623556456 -32 12 14.045086368   8.96 8.22     G8Vk 215 0
16 V* CE Ant TT* 10 42 30.1018928760 -33 40 16.229805204   12.21 10.91   9.10 M2Ve 193 1
17 V* V419 Hya BY* 10 43 28.2715703736 -29 03 51.432666948 9.144 8.596 7.719 7.232 6.806 K1V 171 0
18 NAME Cha 1 MoC 11 06 48 -77 18.0           ~ 1111 1
19 HD 104860 PM* 12 04 33.7308619800 +66 20 11.712857172   8.50 7.91     G0/F9V 90 0
20 V* V1249 Cen TT* 12 15 30.7203201048 -39 48 42.606684144   13.09 11.160 10.919 9.50 M0.5 107 0
21 HD 106906 * 12 17 53.1915103944 -55 58 31.893027240   8.95 8.89 8.46   F5V 142 0
22 HD 107146 PM* 12 19 06.5018840304 +16 32 53.867731128   7.61   6.7   G2V 264 0
23 HD 109573 PM* 12 36 01.0317461592 -39 52 10.220465388   5.786 5.774 7.25 5.81 A0V 610 1
24 HD 110058 * 12 39 46.1962525608 -49 11 55.550898744   8.12 7.97     A0V 75 0
25 HD 111161 * 12 48 16.6672879464 -67 07 52.362291864   7.78 7.60     A3III/IV 36 0
26 HD 111520 * 12 50 19.7183455512 -49 51 48.961948068   9.37 8.87     F5/6V 56 0
27 HD 114082 * 13 09 16.1926316904 -60 18 30.055543200   8.64 8.21     F3V 71 1
28 HD 115600 * 13 19 19.5409822176 -59 28 20.441034660   8.59 8.22     F2IV/V 69 1
29 HD 117214 * 13 30 08.9748682296 -58 29 04.356014100   8.55 8.06     F6V 66 1
30 HD 120326 * 13 49 54.5032282344 -50 14 23.876991348   8.75 8.39     F0V 60 0
31 NAME beta Pic Moving Group MGr 14 30 -42.0           ~ 725 0
32 HD 129590 * 14 44 30.9625895592 -39 59 20.628246480   9.96 9.33     G3V 51 0
33 HD 131835 * 14 56 54.4677661992 -35 41 43.658813184   8.05 7.86     A2IV 114 0
34 BD-07 4003 BY* 15 19 26.8269387505 -07 43 20.189497466 13.403 11.76 10.560 9.461 8.911 M3V 612 2
35 * g Lup PM* 15 41 11.3768069149 -44 39 40.341696305   5.036 4.633     F3/5V 199 0
36 V* NZ Lup BY* 15 53 27.2916958608 -42 16 00.710765508   8.48 7.975   7.213 G2 94 0
37 HD 143675 * 16 03 13.5398461032 -35 17 14.932817772   8.25 8.04     A5IV/V 41 0
38 NAME Upper Sco Association As* 16 12 -23.4           ~ 1289 1
39 HD 145560 * 16 13 34.3335858144 -45 49 03.691334676   9.34 8.90     F5V 41 0
40 HD 146897 Ro* 16 19 29.2418869104 -21 24 13.272759216   9.58 9.11     F2/3V 87 0
41 HD 156623 * 17 20 50.6171972808 -45 25 15.003951564   7.35 7.26     A0V 62 0
42 HD 157587 * 17 24 52.2398598216 -18 51 33.189129828   8.96 8.50     F5V 33 0
43 HD 160305 Em* 17 41 49.0384375440 -50 43 28.040970972   8.91 8.405   7.736 F8/G0V 43 1
44 HD 319139 SB* 18 14 10.4818675368 -32 47 34.516836060   11.47 10.68   9.11 K5+K7 349 0
45 ASAS J181422-3246.2 Em* 18 14 22.0736727072 -32 46 10.132941432   14.14 12.78 12.316 10.380 M1Ve 45 0
46 HD 172555 PM* 18 45 26.9009806435 -64 52 16.534807985   4.967 4.767     A7V 271 0
47 HD 181327 PM* 19 22 58.9437222504 -54 32 16.975668624   7.50 7.04   6.49 F6V 273 0
48 HD 191089 SB? 20 09 05.2156358688 -26 13 26.520165768   7.62 7.18     F5V 144 0
49 HD 192758 PM* 20 18 15.7880861160 -42 51 36.297564804   7.34 7.03     F0V 40 0
50 HD 197481 BY* 20 45 09.5324974119 -31 20 27.237889841   10.05 8.627 9.078 6.593 M1VeBa1 1085 0
51 HD 202628 PM* 21 18 27.2696247000 -43 20 04.743062448   7.39 6.742     G5V 175 0
52 HD 202917 Er* 21 20 49.9576157736 -53 02 03.155667216   9.32 8.67   7.882 G7V 165 0
53 HD 207129 PM* 21 48 15.7511634187 -47 18 13.017893348   6.18 5.58     G2V 323 0
54 CPD-72 2713 Er* 22 42 48.9340258128 -71 42 21.199866948   11.718 10.565 10.401 8.862 K7Ve 62 0
55 * alf PsA C ** 22 48 04.4928501697 -24 22 07.717793375   14.301 12.624 12.216 9.674 M4.0Ve 75 0
56 * alf PsA ** 22 57 39.04625 -29 37 20.0533 1.31 1.25 1.16 1.11 1.09 A4V 1211 3

To bookmark this query, right click on this link: simbad:objects in 2021A&A...653A..88A and select 'bookmark this link' or equivalent in the popup menu


2023.06.08-12:58:45

© Université de Strasbourg/CNRS

    • Contact