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Extreme Asymmetry in the Disk of V1247 Ori

Authors :
Ohta, Yurina
Fukagawa, Misato
Sitko, Michael L.
Muto, Takayuki
Kraus, Stefan
Grady, Carol A.
Wisniewski, John P.
Swearingen, Jeremy R.
Shibai, Hiroshi
Sumi, Takahiro
Hashimoto, Jun
Kudo, Tomoyuki
Kusakabe, Nobuhiko
Momose, Munetake
Okamoto, Yoshiko
Kotani, Takayuki
Takami, Michihiro
Currie, Thayne
Thalmann, Christian
Janson, Markus
Akiyama, Eiji
Follette, Katherine B.
Mayama, Satoshi
Abe, Lyu
Brandner, Wolfgang
Brandt, Timothy D.
Carson, Joseph C.
Egner, Sebastian E.
Feldt, Markus
Goto, Miwa
Guyon, Olivier
Hayano, Yutaka
Hayashi, Masahiko
Hayashi, Saeko S.
Henning, Thomas
Hodapp, Klaus W.
Ishii, Miki
Iye, Masanori
Kandori, Ryo
Knapp, Gillian R.
Kuzuhara, Masayuki
Kwon, Jungmi
Matsuo, Taro
McElwain, Michael W.
Miyama, Shoken
Morino, Jun-Ichi
Moro-Martin, Amaya
Nishimura, Tetsuo
Pyo, Tae-Soo
Serabyn, Eugene
Suenaga, Takuya
Suto, Hiroshi
Suzuki, Ryuji
Takahashi, Yasuhiro H.
Takami, Hideki
Takato, Naruhisa
Terada, Hiroshi
Tomono, Daigo
Turner, Edwin L.
Usuda, Tomonori
Watanabe, Makoto
Yamada, Toru
Tamura, Motohide
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

We present the first near-infrared scattered-light detection of the transitional disk around V1247 Ori, which was obtained using high-resolution polarimetric differential imaging observations with Subaru/HiCIAO. Our imaging in the H band reveals the disk morphology at separations of ~0.14"-0.86" (54-330 au) from the central star. The polarized intensity (PI) image shows a remarkable arc-like structure toward the southeast of the star, whereas the fainter northwest region does not exhibit any notable features. The shape of the arm is consistent with an arc of 0.28" $\pm$ 0.09" in radius (108 au from the star), although the possibility of a spiral arm with a small pitch angle cannot be excluded. V1247 Ori features an exceptionally large azimuthal contrast in scattered, polarized light; the radial peak of the southeastern arc is about three times brighter than the northwestern disk measured at the same distance from the star. Combined with the previous indication of an inhomogeneous density distribution in the gap at $\lesssim$46 au, the notable asymmetry in the outer disk suggests the presence of unseen companions and/or planet-forming processes ongoing in the arc.<br />Comment: 21 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in PASJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1605.01453
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/pasj/psw051