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Large Binocular Telescope Search for Companions and Substructures in the (Pre)transitional Disk of AB Aurigae

Authors :
Sebastián Jorquera
Mickaël Bonnefoy
Sarah Betti
Gaël Chauvin
Esther Buenzli
Laura M. Pérez
Katherine B. Follette
Philip M. Hinz
Anthony Boccaletti
Vanessa Bailey
Beth Biller
Denis Defrère
Josh Eisner
Thomas Henning
Hubert Klahr
Jarron Leisenring
Johan Olofsson
Joshua E. Schlieder
Andrew J. Skemer
Michael F. Skrutskie
Roy Van Boekel
Source :
The Astrophysical Journal. 926:71
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
American Astronomical Society, 2022.

Abstract

Multiwavelength high-resolution imaging of protoplanetary disks has revealed the presence of multiple, varied substructures in their dust and gas components, which might be signposts of young, forming planetary systems. AB Aurigae bears an emblematic (pre)transitional disk showing spiral structures observed in the inner cavity of the disk in both the submillimeter (Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA); 1.3 mm, 12CO) and near-infrared (Spectro-polarimetric High-contrast Exoplanet Research; 1.5–2.5 μm) wavelengths, which have been claimed to arise from dynamical interactions with a massive companion. In this work, we present new deep K s (2.16 μm) and L′ (3.7 μm) band images of AB Aurigae obtained with the L/M-band Infrared Camera on the Large Binocular Telescope, aimed for the detection of both planetary companions and extended disk structures. No point source is recovered, in particular at the outer regions of the disk, where a putative candidate (ρ = 0.″681, PA = 7.°6) had been previously claimed. The nature of a second innermost planet candidate (ρ = 0.″16, PA = 203.°9) cannot be investigated by the new data. We are able to derive 5σ detection limits in both magnitude and mass for the system, going from 14 M Jup at 0.″3 (49 au) down to 3–4 M Jup at 0.″6 (98 au) and beyond, based on the ATMO 2020 evolutionary models. We detect the inner spiral structures (H-band observations. We also recover the ring structure of the system at larger separation (0.″5–0.″7) showing a clear southeast/northwest asymmetry. This structure, observed for the first time at L′ band, remains interior to the dust cavity seen at ALMA, suggesting an efficient dust trapping mechanism at play in the disk.

Details

ISSN :
15384357 and 0004637X
Volume :
926
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Astrophysical Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ec5f0c94095a6593d889bdc5cbf5aca9