Gemini-LIGHTS: Herbig Ae/Be and massive T tauri protoplanetary disks imaged with gemini planet imager
Author
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Rich, Evan A.
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Monnier, John D.
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Aarnio, Alicia
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Laws, Anna S. E.
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Setterholm, Benjamin R.
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Wilner, David J.
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Calvet, Nuria
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Harries, Tim
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Miller, Chris
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Davies, Claire L.
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Adams, Fred C.
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Andrews, Sean M.
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Bae, Jaehan
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Espaillat, Catherine
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Greenbaum, Alexandra Z.
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Hinkley, Sasha
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Kraus, Stefan
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Hartmann, Lee
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Isella, Andrea
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McClure, Melissa
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Oppenheimer, Rebecca
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Pérez Muñoz, Laura María
Author
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Zhu, Zhaohuan
Admission date
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2023-08-22T20:33:26Z
Available date
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2023-08-22T20:33:26Z
Publication date
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2022
Cita de ítem
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The Astronomical Journal, 164:109 (25pp), 2022 September
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Identifier
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10.3847/1538-3881/ac7be4
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/195285
Abstract
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We present the complete sample of protoplanetary disks from the Gemini- Large Imaging with the Gemini Planet
Imager Herbig/T Tauri Survey, which observed bright Herbig Ae/Be stars and T Tauri stars in near-infrared
polarized light to search for signatures of disk evolution and ongoing planet formation. The 44 targets were chosen
based on their near- and mid-infrared colors, with roughly equal numbers of transitional, pre-transitional, and full
disks. Our approach explicitly did not favor well-known, “famous” disks or those observed by the Atacama Large
Millimeter/submillimeter Array, resulting in a less-biased sample suitable to probe the major stages of disk
evolution during planet formation. Our optimized data reduction allowed polarized flux as low as 0.002% of the
stellar light to be detected, and we report polarized scattered light around 80% of our targets. We detected pointlike
companions for 47% of the targets, including three brown dwarfs (two confirmed, one new), and a new super-
Jupiter-mass candidate around V1295 Aql. We searched for correlations between the polarized flux and system
parameters, finding a few clear trends: the presence of a companion drastically reduces the polarized flux levels,
far-IR excess correlates with polarized flux for nonbinary systems, and systems hosting disks with ring structures
have stellar masses <3Me. Our sample also included four hot, dusty “FS CMa” systems, and we detected largescale
( >100 au) scattered light around each, signs of extreme youth for these enigmatic systems. Science-ready
images are publicly available through multiple distribution channels using a new FITS file standard that has been
jointly developed with members of the Very Large Telescope Spectro-polarimetric High-contrast Exoplanet
Research team.
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Patrocinador
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AST-1311698
European Research Council (ERC) 101003096
ANID ACE210002
FB210003
ANID-Millennium Science Initiative Program NCN19_171
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Lenguage
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en
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Publisher
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IOP Publishing
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Type of license
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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States