Resolved Imaging of the HD191089 Debris Disc
Laura J. Churcher, Mark C. Wyatt, Rachel Smith

TL;DR
This paper presents the first resolved mid-infrared images of the HD191089 debris disc, revealing a dust belt with an inner cavity and potential signs of planetary perturbations, shedding light on planet formation processes.
Contribution
It provides the first resolved imaging of HD191089's debris disc, constraining its structure and suggesting possible planetary influence.
Findings
Dust belt extends from 28 to 90 AU
Inner cavity indicates possible planet truncation
Potential brightness asymmetry suggests perturbations from a massive body
Abstract
Two thirds of the F star members of the 12 Myr old Beta Pictoris Moving Group (BPMG) show significant excess emission in the mid-infrared, several million years after the expected dispersal of the protoplanetary disc. Theoretical models of planet formation suggest that this peak in the mid-infrared emission could be due to the formation of Pluto-sized bodies in the disc, which ignite the collisional cascade and enhance the production of small dust. Here we present resolved mid-infrared imaging of the disc of HD191089 (F5V in the BPMG) and consider its implications for the state of planet formation in this system. HD191089 was observed at 18.3 microns using T-ReCS on Gemini South and the images were compared to models of the disc to constrain the radial distribution of the dust. The emission observed at 18.3 microns is shown to be significantly extended beyond the PSF at a position angle…
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