Resolving structure of the disk around HD100546 at 7 mm with ATCA
Christopher Wright, Sarah Maddison, David Wilner, Michael Burton, Dave, Lommen, Ewine van Dishoeck, Paola Pinilla, Tyler Bourke, Francois Menard,, Catherine Walsh

TL;DR
High-resolution 7 mm imaging of HD100546's disk reveals a 25 AU gap and complex structure, supporting the presence of multiple giant planets within 25 AU, and provides detailed disk orientation and emission characteristics.
Contribution
This study provides the first high-resolution imaging of HD100546's disk at 7 mm, revealing detailed structure and confirming the presence of a significant gap likely caused by giant planets.
Findings
Detected a 25 AU inner gap in the disk.
Confirmed the disk's inclination and position angle.
Supported the presence of multiple giant planets within 25 AU.
Abstract
There is much evidence that planet formation is occurring in the disk around the Herbig Be star HD100546. To learn more about the processes occurring in this disk we conducted high resolution imaging at 43/45 GHz with the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA). Multiple array configurations were used, providing a best spatial resolution of 0.15 arcsec, or 15 AU at HD100546's distance of 100 pc. Significant structure is revealed, but its precise form is dependent on the plane sampling used for the image reconstruction. At a resolution of 30 AU we detected an inner gap in the disk with a radius of 25 AU and a position angle approximately along the known disk major axis. With different weighting, and an achieved resolution of 15 AU, emission appears at the centre and the disk takes on the shape of an incomplete ring, much like a horseshoe, again…
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