Observing planet-disk interaction in debris disks
Steve Ertel, Sebastian Wolf, Jens Rodmann

TL;DR
This paper explores how planet-disk interactions create observable structures in debris disks and assesses the capabilities of ALMA and JWST to detect these features for characterizing exoplanets.
Contribution
It combines analytical models and N-body simulations to evaluate the observability of debris disk structures caused by planet-disk interactions with upcoming telescopes.
Findings
Planet-disk interactions produce prominent, detectable structures.
Future facilities can spatially resolve and characterize debris disk features.
ALMA's sensitivity limits require trade-offs between sensitivity and resolution.
Abstract
Context. Structures in debris disks induced by planetdisk interaction are promising to provide valuable constraints on the existence and properties of embedded planets. Aims. We investigate the observability of structures in debris disks induced by planet-disk interaction. Methods. The observability of debris disks with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) is studied on the basis of a simple analytical disk model. Furthermore, N-body simulations are used to model the spatial dust distribution in debris disks under the influence of planet-disk interaction. Images at optical scattered light to millimeter thermal re-emission are computed. Available information about the expected capabilities of ALMA and the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) are used to investigate the observability of characteristic disk structures through spatially resolved imaging. Results. Planet-disk…
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