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Eiji Akiyama

National Astronomical Observatory of Japan, Japan

Title: Observational signature of grain growth in the protoplanetary disk around young star LkHα 330

Biography

Biography: Eiji Akiyama

Abstract

Grain growth is an initial step toward planet formation since it involves the coagulation of approximately micron-sized dust, resulting in planetesimals and finally planets. We have conducted H-band (1.6 μm) linear polarimetric observations by Subaru telescope and 0.88 mm interferometric observations by Submillimeter Array toward a transitional disk around the intermediate-mass pre-main sequence star LkHα 330. The observations show a pair of asymmetric spiral arms in the disk, suggesting that a massive unseen (proto)planet exists in the disk as indicated by recent global hydro simulations. The possibility of grain growth that can generate the asymmetric structure was investigated through the opacity index (β) from the observed slope of the spectral energy distribution between 0.88 mm and 1.3 mm wavelength taken by several interferometric observations. The results imply that grains are indistinguishable from the interstellar medium dust in the east side (β~2.0), but much smaller in the west side (β~0.7), indicating differential grain growth or dust trapping in the spiral arms. Combining the results of near-infrared and submillimeter observations, we find that the spiral arm is geometrically thick and grains grow to millimeter size near the disk mid-plane. Future observations at centimeter wavelength and differential polarization imaging in other bands (Y to K) with extreme adaptive optics imagers are required to understand how large dust grains form and to further explore the dust distribution in the disk.