SIMBAD references

2016ApJ...832...18L - Astrophys. J., 832, 18-18 (2016/November-3)

An ordered magnetic field in the protoplanetary disk of AB Aur revealed by mid-infrared polarimetry.

LI D., PANTIN E., TELESCO C.M., ZHANG H., WRIGHT C.M., BARNES P.J., PACKHAM C. and MARINAS N.

Abstract (from CDS):

Magnetic fields (B-fields) play a key role in the formation and evolution of protoplanetary disks, but their properties are poorly understood due to the lack of observational constraints. Using CanariCam at the 10.4 m Gran Telescopio Canarias, we have mapped out the mid-infrared polarization of the protoplanetary disk around the Herbig Ae star AB Aur. We detect ∼0.44% polarization at 10.3 µm from AB Aur's inner disk (r < 80 au), rising to ∼1.4% at larger radii. Our simulations imply that the mid-infrared polarization of the inner disk arises from dichroic emission of elongated particles aligned in a disk B-field. The field is well ordered on a spatial scale, commensurate with our resolution (∼50 au), and we infer a poloidal shape tilted from the rotational axis of the disk. The disk of AB Aur is optically thick at 10.3 µm, so polarimetry at this wavelength is probing the B-field near the disk surface. Our observations therefore confirm that this layer, favored by some theoretical studies for developing magneto-rotational instability and its resultant viscosity, is indeed very likely to be magnetized. At radii beyond ∼80 au, the mid-infrared polarization results primarily from scattering by dust grains with sizes up to ∼1 µm, a size indicating both grain growth and, probably, turbulent lofting of the particles from the disk mid-plane.

Abstract Copyright: © 2016. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

Journal keyword(s): magnetic fields - polarization - protoplanetary disks - stars: individual: AB Aur - stars: pre-main sequence - stars: pre-main sequence

Simbad objects: 3

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