4.5 Article

Nonazimuthal linear polarization in protoplanetary disks

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 582, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/201527267

Keywords

scattering; techniques: polarimetric; circumstellar matter; stars: variables: T Tauri, Herbig Ae/Be

Funding

  1. Millennium Science Initiative, Chilean Ministry of Economy, Nucleus [RC130007]
  2. ALMA/CONICYT [31100025, 31130027]
  3. FONDECYT [1141269, 3150643]
  4. EU [284405]

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Several studies discussing imaging polarimetry observations of protoplanetary disks use the so-called radial Stokes parameters Q(phi) and U-phi to discuss the results. This approach has the advantage of providing a direct measure of the noise in the polarized images under the assumption that the polarization is only azimuthal, i.e., perpendicular to the direction toward the illuminating source. However, a detailed study of the validity of this assumption is currently missing. We aim to test whether departures from azimuthal polarization can naturally be produced by scattering processes in optically thick protoplanetary disks at near infrared wavelengths. We use the radiative transfer code MCFOST to create a generic model of a transition disk using different grain size distributions and dust masses. From these models we generate synthetic polarized images at 2.2 mu m. We find that even for moderate inclinations (e.g., i = 40 degrees), multiple scattering alone can produce significant (up to similar to 4.5% of the Q(phi) image, peak-to-peak) nonazimuthal polarization reflected in the U-phi images. We also find that different grain populations can naturally produce radial polarization (i.e., negative values in the Q(phi) images). Despite the simplifications of the models, our results suggest that caution is recommended when interpreting polarized images by only analyzing the Q(phi) and U-phi images. We find that there can be astrophysical signal in the U-phi images and negative values in the Q(phi) images, which indicate departures from azimuthal polarization. If significant signal is detected in the U-phi images, we recommend checking the standard Q and U images to look for departures from azimuthal polarization. On the positive side, signal in the U-phi images once all instrumental and data-reduction artifacts have been corrected for means that there is more information to be extracted regarding the dust population and particle density.

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