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Investigating grain growth in disks around southern T Tauri stars at millimetre wavelengths

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posted on 2024-08-06, 11:03 authored by D. Lommen, C. M. Wright, Sarah MaddisonSarah Maddison, J. K. Jørgensen, T. L. Bourke, E. F. Van Dishoeck, A. Hughes, D. J. Wilner, M. Burton, H. J. Van Langevelde
CONTEXT - Low-mass stars form with disks in which the coagulation of grains may eventually lead to the formation of planets. It is not known when and where grain growth occurs, as models that explain the observations are often degenerate. A way to break this degeneracy is to resolve the sources under study. AIMS - To find evidence for the existence of grains of millimetre sizes in disks around in T Tauri stars, implying grain growth. METHODS - The Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) was used to observe 15 southern T Tauri stars, five in the constellation Lupus and ten in Chamaeleon, at 3.3 millimetre. The five Lupus sources were also observed with the Submillimeter Array (SMA) at 1.4 millimetre. Our new data are complemented with data from the literature to determine the slopes of the spectral energy distributions in the millimetre regime. RESULTS - Ten sources were detected at better than 3sigma with the ATCA, with sigma ~1-2 mJy, and all sources that were observed with the SMA were detected at better than 15sigma, with sigma ~4 mJy. Six of the sources in our sample are resolved to physical radii of ~100 AU. Assuming that the emission from such large disks is predominantly optically thin, the millimetre slope can be related directly to the opacity index. For the other sources, the opacity indices are lower limits. Four out of six resolved sources have opacity indices <~1, indicating grain growth to millimetre sizes and larger. The masses of the disks range from < 0.01 to 0.08 MSun, which is comparable to the minimum mass solar nebula. A tentative correlation is found between the millimetre slope and the strength and shape of the 10-micron silicate feature, indicating that grain growth occurs on similar (short) timescales in both the inner and outer disk.

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ISSN

0004-6361

Journal title

Astronomy and Astrophysics

Volume

462

Issue

1

Pagination

9 pp

Publisher

EDP Sciences

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2007 European Southern Observatory (ESO). The published version is reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher.

Language

eng

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