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Scattering and sublimation: a multiscale view of µm-sized dust in the inclined disc of HD 145718

Authors :
Davies, Claire L.
Rich, Evan A.
Harries, Tim J.
Monnier, John D.
Laws, Anna S. E.
Andrews, Sean M.
Bae, Jaehan
Wilner, David J.
Anugu, Narsireddy
Ennis, Jacob
Gardner, Tyler
Kraus, Stefan
Labdon, Aaron
Bouquin, Jean-Baptiste le
Lanthermann, Cyprien
Schaefer, Gail H.
Setterholm, Benjamin R.
Brummelaar, Theo ten
Source :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 511:2434-2452
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2022.

Abstract

We present multi-instrument observations of the disc around the Herbig~Ae star, HD~145718, employing geometric and Monte Carlo radiative transfer models to explore the disc orientation, the vertical and radial extent of the near infrared (NIR) scattering surface, and the properties of the dust in the disc surface and sublimation rim. The disc appears inclined at $67-71^{\circ}$, with position angle, PA\,$=-1.0-0.6^{\circ}$, consistent with previous estimates. The NIR scattering surface extends out to $\sim75\,$au and we infer an aspect ratio, $h_{\rm{scat}}(r)/r\sim0.24$ in $J$-band; $\sim0.22$ in $H$-band. Our GPI images and VLTI+CHARA NIR interferometry suggest that the disc surface layers are populated by grains $\gtrsim \lambda/2\pi$ in size, indicating these grains are aerodynamically supported against settling and/or the density of smaller grains is relatively low. We demonstrate that our geometric analysis provides a reasonable assessment of the height of the NIR scattering surface at the outer edge of the disc and, if the inclination can be independently constrained, has the potential to probe the flaring exponent of the scattering surface in similarly inclined ($i\gtrsim70^{\circ}$) discs. In re-evaluating HD~145718's stellar properties, we found that the object's dimming events - previously characterised as UX~Or and dipper variability - are consistent with dust occultation by grains larger, on average, than found in the ISM. This occulting dust likely originates close to the inferred dust sublimation radius at $0.17\,$au.<br />Comment: 18 pages, 16 figures; Accepted for publication in MNRAS

Details

ISSN :
13652966 and 00358711
Volume :
511
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c19119260835be7b58c8e630d13b2ce9