4.7 Article

SUBMILLIMETER ARRAY OBSERVATIONS OF THE RX J1633.9-2442 TRANSITION DISK: EVIDENCE FOR MULTIPLE PLANETS IN THE MAKING

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 752, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/752/1/75

Keywords

circumstellar matter; protoplanetary disks; stars: individual (RX J1633.9-2442); submillimeter: planetary systems

Funding

  1. NASA under California Institute of Technology
  2. NASA/JPL
  3. NSF [RSA-1369686, AST08-08144]
  4. NASA
  5. Millennium Science Initiative, Chilean Ministry of Economy [Nucleus P10-022-F]
  6. Division Of Astronomical Sciences
  7. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [808144] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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We present continuum high-resolution Submillimeter Array (SMA) observations of the transition disk object RX J1633.9-2442, which is located in the Ophiuchus molecular cloud and has recently been identified as a likely site of ongoing giant planet formation. The observations were taken at 340 GHz (880 mu m) with the SMA in its most extended configuration, resulting in an angular resolution of 0 ''.3 (35 AU at the distance of the target). We find that the disk is highly inclined (i similar to 50 degrees) and has an inner cavity similar to 25 AU in radius, which is clearly resolved by our observations. We simultaneously model the entire optical to millimeter wavelength spectral energy distribution and SMA visibilities of RX J1633.9-2442 in order to constrain the structure of its disk. We find that an empty cavity similar to 25 AU in radius is inconsistent with the excess emission observed at 12, 22, and 24 mu m. Instead, the mid-IR excess can be modeled by either a narrow, optically thick ring at similar to 10 AU or an optically thin region extending from similar to 7 AU to similar to 25 AU. The inner disk (r less than or similar to 5 AU) is mostly depleted of small dust grains as attested by the lack of detectable near-IR excess. We also present deep Keck aperture masking observations in the near-IR, which rule out the presence of a companion up to 500 times fainter than the primary star (in K band) for projected separations in the 5-20 AU range. We argue that the complex structure of the RX J1633.9-2442 disk is best explained by multiple planets embedded within the disk. We also suggest that the properties and incidence of objects such as RX J1633.9-2442, T Cha, and LkCa 15 (and those of the companions recently identified to these two latter objects) are most consistent with the runaway gas accretion phase of the core accretion model, when giant planets gain their envelopes and suddenly become massive enough to open wide gaps in the disk.

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