Hubble and Spitzer Space Telescope Observations of the Debris Disk around the Nearby K Dwarf HD 92945
D. A. Golimowski, J. E. Krist, K. R. Stapelfeldt, C. H. Chen, D. R., Ardila, G. Bryden, M. Clampin, H. C. Ford, G. D. Illingworth, P. Plavchan, G., H. Rieke, and K. Y. L. Su

TL;DR
This study presents the first resolved images of the debris disk around the nearby K dwarf HD 92945, revealing its structure, dust properties, and potential signs of planet formation, combining HST and Spitzer observations.
Contribution
First resolved imaging and detailed analysis of the debris disk around HD 92945, including its structure, dust composition, and implications for planet formation.
Findings
Disk has an inner ring at 43-65 AU and an outer edge at 110 AU.
Dust grains are predominantly larger than a few microns, with a low albedo.
Evidence suggests an advanced stage of planet formation around the star.
Abstract
[ABRIDGED] We present the first resolved images of the debris disk around the nearby K dwarf HD 92945. Our F606W (V) and F814W (I) HST/ACS coronagraphic images reveal an inclined, axisymmetric disk consisting of an inner ring 2".0-3".0 (43-65 AU) from the star and an extended outer disk whose surface brightness declines slowly with increasing radius 3".0-5".1 (65-110 AU) from the star. A precipitous drop in the surface brightness beyond 110 AU suggests that the outer disk is truncated at that distance. The radial surface-density profile is peaked at both the inner ring and the outer edge of the disk. The dust in the outer disk scatters neutrally but isotropically, and it has a low V-band albedo of 0.1. We also present new Spitzer MIPS photometry and IRS spectra of HD 92945. These data reveal no infrared excess from the disk shortward of 30 micron and constrain the width of the 70 micron…
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