Artículos de revistas
ALMA images of discs: are all gaps carved by planets?
Fecha
2015Registro en:
MNRAS 454, L36–L40 (2015)
DOI: 10.1093/mnrasl/slv120
Autor
González, J. -F.
Laibe, G.
Maddison, S. T.
Pinte, Christophe
Ménard, Francois
Institución
Resumen
Protoplanetary discs are now routinely observed and exoplanets, after the numerous indirect
discoveries, are starting to be directly imaged. To better understand the planet formation
process, the next step is the detection of forming planets or of signposts of young planets still in
their disc, such as gaps. A spectacular example is the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter
Array (ALMA) science verification image of HL Tau showing numerous gaps and rings in its
disc. To study the observability of planet gaps, we ran 3D hydrodynamical simulations of a gas
and dust disc containing a 5 MJ gap-opening planet and characterized the spatial distribution
of migrating, growing and fragmenting dust grains. We then computed the corresponding
synthetic images for ALMA. For a value of the dust fragmentation threshold of 15 m s−1 for
the collisional velocity, we identify for the first time a self-induced dust pile-up in simulations
taking fragmentation into account. This feature, in addition to the easily detected planet gap,
causes a second apparent gap that could be mistaken for the signature of a second planet. It is
therefore essential to be cautious in the interpretation of gap detections.