Searching for circumplanetary disks around LkCa 15
Andrea Isella, Claire J. Chandler, John M. Carpenter, Laura M. Pe'rez,, Luca Ricci

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution VLA observations to investigate the presence of circumplanetary disks around LkCa 15, constraining their possible mass and size, and providing insights into planet formation processes.
Contribution
First high-resolution 7 mm observations of LkCa 15's disk that set limits on circumplanetary disk properties and inform future ALMA studies.
Findings
Detected a dusty annulus consistent with shorter wavelength observations.
Identified a compact central source possibly from hot dust or ionized gas.
Placed upper limits on the mass and size of potential circumplanetary disks.
Abstract
We present Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA) observations of the 7 mm continuum emission from the disk surrounding the young star LkCa 15. The observations achieve an angular resolution of 70 mas and spatially resolve the circumstellar emission on a spatial scale of 9 AU. The continuum emission traces a dusty annulus of 45 AU in radius that is consistent with the dust morphology observed at shorter wavelengths. The VLA observations also reveal a compact source at the center of the disk, possibly due to thermal emission from hot dust or ionized gas located within a few AU from the central star. No emission is observed between the star and the dusty ring, and, in particular, at the position of the candidate protoplanet LkCa 15 b. By comparing the observations with theoretical models for circumplanetary disk emission, we find that if LkCa~15~b is a massive planet (>5 M_J) accreting at…
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