Resolving the Planet-hosting Inner Regions of the LkCa 15 Disk

Open Access
Authors
  • C. Thalmann
  • M. Janson
  • A. Garufi
  • A. Boccaletti
  • S.P. Quanz
  • E. Sissa
  • R. Gratton
  • G. Salter
  • M. Benisty
  • M. Bonnefoy
  • G. Chauvin
  • S. Daemgen
  • S. Desidera
  • C. Dominik ORCID logo
  • N. Engler
  • M. Feldt
  • T. Henning
  • A.-M. Lagrange
  • M. Langlois
  • J. Lannier
  • H. Le Coroller
  • R. Ligi
  • F. Ménard
  • D. Mesa
  • M.R. Meyer
  • G.D. Mulders
  • J. Olofsson
  • C. Pinte
  • H.M. Schmid
  • A. Vigan
  • A. Zurlo
Publication date 01-09-2016
Journal Astrophysical Journal Letters
Article number L17
Volume | Issue number 828 | 2
Number of pages 6
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
LkCa 15 hosts a pre-transitional disk as well as at least one accreting protoplanet orbiting in its gap. Previous disk observations have focused mainly on the outer disk, which is cleared inward of ∼50 au. The planet candidates, on the other hand, reside at orbital radii around 15au, where disk observations have been unreliable until recently. Here, we present new J-band imaging polarimetry of LkCa 15 with SPHERE IRDIS, yielding the most accurate and detailed scattered-light images of the disk to date down to the planet-hosting inner regions. We find what appear to be persistent asymmetric structures in the scattering material at the location of the planet candidates, which could be responsible at least for parts of the signals measured with sparse-aperture masking. These images further allow us to trace the gap edge in scattered light at all position angles and search the inner and outer disks for morphological substructure. The outer disk appears smooth with slight azimuthal variations in polarized surface brightness, which may be due to shadowing from the inner disk or a two-peaked polarized phase function. We find that the near-side gap edge revealed by polarimetry matches the sharp crescent seen in previous ADI imaging very well. Finally, the ratio of polarized disk to stellar flux is more than six times larger in the J-band than in the RI bands.
Document type Article
Note Based on data collected at the European Southern Observatory, Chile (ESO Programme 096.C-0248(A)).
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8205/828/2/L17
Published at https://arxiv.org/abs/1608.08642
Other links http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2016ApJ...828L..17T http://telbib.eso.org/detail.php?bibcode=2016ApJ...828L..17T
Downloads
1608.08642.pd (Accepted author manuscript)
Permalink to this page
Back