Artículo de revista
Gemini-LIGHTS: Herbig Ae/Be and massive T tauri protoplanetary disks imaged with gemini planet imager
Fecha
2022Registro en:
The Astronomical Journal, 164:109 (25pp), 2022 September
10.3847/1538-3881/ac7be4
Autor
Rich, Evan A.
Monnier, John D.
Aarnio, Alicia
Laws, Anna S. E.
Setterholm, Benjamin R.
Wilner, David J.
Calvet, Nuria
Harries, Tim
Miller, Chris
Davies, Claire L.
Adams, Fred C.
Andrews, Sean M.
Bae, Jaehan
Espaillat, Catherine
Greenbaum, Alexandra Z.
Hinkley, Sasha
Kraus, Stefan
Hartmann, Lee
Isella, Andrea
McClure, Melissa
Oppenheimer, Rebecca
Pérez Muñoz, Laura María
Zhu, Zhaohuan
Institución
Resumen
We present the complete sample of protoplanetary disks from the Gemini- Large Imaging with the Gemini Planet
Imager Herbig/T Tauri Survey, which observed bright Herbig Ae/Be stars and T Tauri stars in near-infrared
polarized light to search for signatures of disk evolution and ongoing planet formation. The 44 targets were chosen
based on their near- and mid-infrared colors, with roughly equal numbers of transitional, pre-transitional, and full
disks. Our approach explicitly did not favor well-known, “famous” disks or those observed by the Atacama Large
Millimeter/submillimeter Array, resulting in a less-biased sample suitable to probe the major stages of disk
evolution during planet formation. Our optimized data reduction allowed polarized flux as low as 0.002% of the
stellar light to be detected, and we report polarized scattered light around 80% of our targets. We detected pointlike
companions for 47% of the targets, including three brown dwarfs (two confirmed, one new), and a new super-
Jupiter-mass candidate around V1295 Aql. We searched for correlations between the polarized flux and system
parameters, finding a few clear trends: the presence of a companion drastically reduces the polarized flux levels,
far-IR excess correlates with polarized flux for nonbinary systems, and systems hosting disks with ring structures
have stellar masses <3Me. Our sample also included four hot, dusty “FS CMa” systems, and we detected largescale
( >100 au) scattered light around each, signs of extreme youth for these enigmatic systems. Science-ready
images are publicly available through multiple distribution channels using a new FITS file standard that has been
jointly developed with members of the Very Large Telescope Spectro-polarimetric High-contrast Exoplanet
Research team.