4.7 Article

RULING OUT STELLAR COMPANIONS AND RESOLVING THE INNERMOST REGIONS OF TRANSITIONAL DISKS WITH THE KECK INTERFEROMETER

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 710, Issue 1, Pages 265-278

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/710/1/265

Keywords

circumstellar matter; protoplanetary disks; stars: individual (DM Tau, GM Aur, LkCa 15, UX Tau A, RY Tau); stars: pre-main sequence; techniques: interferometric

Funding

  1. NSF Astronomy & Astrophysics Postdoctoral Fellowship
  2. W.M. Keck Foundation
  3. National Aeronautics and Space Administration

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With the Keck Interferometer, we have studied at 2 mu m the innermost regions of several nearby, young, dust-depleted transitional disks. Our observations target five of the six clearest cases of transitional disks in the Taurus/Auriga star-forming region (DM Tau, GM Aur, LkCa 15, UX Tau A, and RY Tau) to explore the possibility that the depletion of optically thick dust from the inner disks is caused by stellar companions rather than the more typical planet-formation hypothesis. At the 99.7% confidence level, the observed visibilities exclude binaries with flux ratios of at least 0.05 and separations ranging from 2.5 to 30 mas (0.35-4 AU) over greater than or similar to 94% of the area covered by our measurements. All targets but DM Tau show near-infrared (NIR) excess in their spectral energy distribution ( SED) higher than our companion flux ratio detection limits. While a companion has previously been detected in the candidate transitional disk system CoKu Tau/4, we can exclude similar mass companions as the typical origin for the clearing of inner dust in transitional disks and of the NIR excess emission. Unlike CoKu Tau/4, all our targets show some evidence of accretion. We find that all but one of the targets are clearly spatially resolved, and UX Tau A is marginally resolved. Our data are consistent with hot material on small scales (0.1 AU) inside of and separated from the cooler outer disk, consistent with the recent SED modeling. These observations support the notion that some transitional disks have radial gaps in their optically thick material, which could be an indication for planet formation in the habitable zone (similar to a few AU) of a protoplanetary disk.

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