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An Exo-Kuiper Belt and An Extended Halo around HD 191089 in Scattered Light

Authors :
Ren, Bin
Choquet, Élodie
Perrin, Marshall D.
Duchêne, Gaspard
Debes, John H.
Pueyo, Laurent
Rice, Malena
Chen, Christine
Schneider, Glenn
Esposito, Thomas M.
Poteet, Charles A.
Wang, Jason J.
Ammons, S. Mark
Ansdell, Megan
Arriaga, Pauline
Bailey, Vanessa P.
Barman, Travis
Bruzzone, Juan Sebastián
Bulger, Joanna
Chilcote, Jeffrey
Cotten, Tara
De Rosa, Robert J.
Doyon, Rene
Fitzgerald, Michael P.
Follette, Katherine B.
Goodsell, Stephen J.
Gerard, Benjamin L.
Graham, James R.
Greenbaum, Alexandra Z.
Hagan, J. Brendan
Hibon, Pascale
Hines, Dean C.
Hung, Li-Wei
Ingraham, Patrick
Kalas, Paul
Konopacky, Quinn
Larkin, James E.
Macintosh, Bruce
Maire, Jérôme
Marchis, Franck
Marois, Christian
Mazoyer, Johan
Ménard, François
Metchev, Stanimir
Millar-Blanchaer, Maxwell A.
Mittal, Tushar
Moerchen, Magaret
Nielsen, Eric L.
N'Diaye, Mamadou
Oppenheimer, Rebecca
Palmer, David
Patience, Jennifer
Pinte, Christophe
Poyneer, Lisa
Rajan, Abhijith
Rameau, Julien
Rantakyrö, Fredrik T.
Ruffio, Jean-Baptiste
Ryan, Dominic
Savransky, Dmitry
Schneider, Adam C.
Sivaramakrishnan, Anand
Song, Inseok
Soummer, Rémi
Stark, Christopher
Thomas, Sandrine
Vigan, Arthur
Wallace, J. Kent
Ward-Duong, Kimberly
Wiktorowicz, Sloane
Wolff, Schuyler
Ygouf, Marie
Norman, Colin
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

We have obtained Hubble Space Telescope STIS and NICMOS, and Gemini/GPI scattered light images of the HD 191089 debris disk. We identify two spatial components: a ring resembling Kuiper Belt in radial extent (FWHM: ${\sim}$25 au, centered at ${\sim}$46 au), and a halo extending to ${\sim}$640 au. We find that the halo is significantly bluer than the ring, consistent with the scenario that the ring serves as the "birth ring" for the smaller dust in the halo. We measure the scattering phase functions in the 30{\deg}-150{\deg} scattering angle range and find the halo dust is both more forward- and backward-scattering than the ring dust. We measure a surface density power law index of -0.68${\pm}$0.04 for the halo, which indicates the slow-down of the radial outward motion of the dust. Using radiative transfer modeling, we attempt to simultaneously reproduce the (visible) total and (near-infrared) polarized intensity images of the birth ring. Our modeling leads to mutually inconsistent results, indicating that more complex models, such as the inclusion of more realistic aggregate particles, are needed.<br />Comment: 29 pages, 18 figures, ApJ accepted

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1908.00006
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ab3403