Panchromatic observations and modeling of the HV Tau C edge-on disk
G. Duchene, C. McCabe, C. Pinte, K. R. Stapelfeldt, F. Menard, G., Duvert, A. M. Ghez, H. L. Maness, H. Bouy, D. Barrado y Navascues, M., Morales-Calderon, S. Wolf, D. L. Padgett, T. Y. Brooke, A. Noriega-Crespo

TL;DR
This study combines high-resolution imaging, interferometry, and modeling to analyze the HV Tau C edge-on disk, revealing its structure, dust properties, and potential for grain growth, while highlighting modeling challenges.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive multi-wavelength observational analysis and radiative transfer modeling of HV Tau C, emphasizing the need for more complex dust models.
Findings
Disk shows anisotropic scattering almost independent of wavelength
Radial velocity gradient indicates Keplerian rotation around a 0.5-1 Msun star
Models with large dust grains fit most data but cannot explain all observations
Abstract
We present new high spatial resolution (<~ 0.1") 1-5 micron adaptive optics images, interferometric 1.3 mm continuum and 12CO 2-1 maps, and 350 micron, 2.8 and 3.3 mm fluxes measurements of the HV Tau system. Our adaptive optics images reveal an unusually slow orbital motion within the tight HV Tau AB pair that suggests a highly eccentric orbit and/or a large deprojected physical separation. Scattered light images of the HV Tau C edge-on protoplanetary disk suggest that the anisotropy of the dust scattering phase function is almost independent of wavelength from 0.8 to 5 micron, whereas the dust opacity decreases significantly over the same range. The images further reveal a marked lateral asymmetry in the disk that does not vary over a timescale of 2 years. We further detect a radial velocity gradient in the disk in our 12CO map that lies along the same position angle as the elongation…
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