4.7 Article

GRAIN GROWTH AND GLOBAL STRUCTURE OF THE PROTOPLANETARY DISK ASSOCIATED WITH THE MATURE CLASSICAL T TAURI STAR, PDS 66

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 697, Issue 2, Pages 1305-1315

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/697/2/1305

Keywords

circumstellar matter; planetary systems: protoplanetary disks; stars: pre-main sequence

Funding

  1. Commonwealth of Australia for operation as a National Facility managed by CSIRO
  2. NASA/ ESA Hubble Space Telescope ( HST),
  3. AURA, under NASA [NAS5-26555]
  4. GO programs [10527, 10177]
  5. NASA [1224768, 1224634, 1224566]

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We present Australia Telescope Compact Array interferometric observations of the old (13 Myr), nearby (86 pc) classical T Tauri star (cTTS), PDS 66. Unresolved 3 and 12 mm continuum emission is detected toward PDS 66, and upper limits are derived for the 3 and 6 cm flux densities. The millimeter-wave data show a spectral slope flatter than that expected for interstellar medium-sized dust particles, which is evidence of grain growth. We also present HST/NICMOS 1.1 mu m point-spread-function-subtracted coronagraphic imaging observations of the circumstellar environment of PDS 66. The Hubble Space Telescope observations reveal a bilaterally symmetric circumstellar region of dust scattering similar to 0.32% of the central starlight, declining in surface brightness as r(-4.53). The light-scattering disk of material is inclined 32 degrees +/- 5 degrees. from a face- on viewing geometry, and extends to a radius of 170 AU. These data are combined with published optical and longer wavelength observations to make qualitative comparisons between the median Taurus and PDS 66 spectral energy distributions. By comparing the near-infrared emission to a simple model, we determine that the location of the inner disk radius is consistent with the dust sublimation radius (similar to 1400 K at 0.1 AU). We place constraints on the total disk mass using a flat-disk model and find that it is probably too low to form gas giant planets according to current models. Despite the fact that PDS 66 is much older than a typical cTTS (<= 5 Myr), its physical properties are not much different.

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