Tracing large-scale structures in circumstellar disks with ALMA
Jan Philipp Ruge, Sebastian Wolf, Ana L. Uribe, Hubert H. Klahr

TL;DR
This study assesses ALMA's capability to detect planet-induced structures in circumstellar disks through extensive simulations, revealing that ALMA can resolve features down to a few AU, with magnetic fields influencing gap visibility.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive parameter study showing ALMA's effectiveness in observing disk structures across various star-disk-planet configurations, including magnetic effects and grain size impacts.
Findings
ALMA can trace disk structures down to a few AU.
Magnetic fields widen gaps, improving their observability.
Disk mass has minor impact on detection within typical ranges.
Abstract
Planets are supposed to form in circumstellar disks. The gravitational potential of a planet perturbs the disk and leads to characteristic structures, i.e. spiral waves and gaps, in the disk's density profile. We perform a large-scale parameter study of the observability of these planet-induced structures in circumstellar disks with ALMA. On the basis of HD and MHD simulations, we calculated the disk temperature structure and (sub)mm images of these systems. These were used to derive simulated ALMA images. Because appropriate objects are frequent in Taurus, we focused on a distance of 140pc and a declination of 20{\deg}. The explored range of star-disk-planet configurations consists of 6 HD simulations (including magnetic fields and different planet masses), 9 disk sizes, 15 total disk masses, 6 different central stars, and two different grain size distributions. On almost all scales…
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