Unveiling the Structure of Pre-Transitional Disks
C. Espaillat, P. D'Alessio, J. Hern\'andez, E. Nagel, K. L. Luhman, D., M. Watson, N. Calvet, J. Muzerolle, M. McClure

TL;DR
This paper investigates the structure of pre-transitional disks, revealing their inner regions contain optically thick inner disks, which differ from transitional disks, and discusses implications for planet formation.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of pre-transitional disks' inner structures using veiling-based techniques and models their spectral energy distributions considering shadowing effects.
Findings
Pre-transitional disks have optically thick inner disks at dust destruction radii.
Their near-infrared excess differs from transitional disks, indicating different dust properties.
Inner disk structures may signal young planet formation processes.
Abstract
In the past few years, several disks with inner holes that are empty of small dust grains have been detected and are known as transitional disks. Recently, Spitzer has identified a new class of "pre-transitional disks" with gaps; these objects have an optically thick inner disk separated from an optically thick outer disk by an optically thin disk gap. A near-infrared spectrum provided the first confirmation of a gap in the pre-transitional disk of LkCa 15 by verifying that the near-infrared excess emission in this object was due to an optically thick inner disk. Here we investigate the difference between the nature of the inner regions of transitional and pre-transitional disks using the same veiling-based technique to extract the near-infrared excess emission above the stellar photosphere. We show that the near-infrared excess emission of the previously identified pre-transitional…
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