Azimuthal asymmetries in the debris disk around HD61005
J. Olofsson, M. Samland, H. Avenhaus, C. Caceres, Th. Henning, A., Moor, J. Milli, H. Canovas, S. Quanz, M. R. Schreiber, J.-C. Augereau, A., Bayo, A. Bazzon, J.-L. Beuzit, A. Boccaletti, E. Buenzli, S. Casassus, G., Chauvin, C. Dominik, S. Desidera, M. Feldt, R. Gratton

TL;DR
This study presents high-resolution multi-wavelength observations of the HD61005 debris disk, revealing its eccentric structure and dust distribution, and suggests a massive collision as a possible cause of its morphology, offering insights into planetesimal formation.
Contribution
First detailed multi-wavelength imaging of HD61005's debris disk, revealing its eccentricity and dust distribution, and proposing a collision event as an alternative to planet-disk interactions.
Findings
Disk has moderate eccentricity (~0.1).
Dust density is twice higher at pericenter.
No giant planets detected in the system.
Abstract
Debris disks offer valuable insights into the latest stages of circumstellar disk evolution, and can possibly help us to trace the outcomes of planetary formation processes. In the age range 10 to 100\,Myr, most of the gas is expected to have been removed from the system, giant planets (if any) must have already been formed, and the formation of terrestrial planets may be on-going. Pluto-sized planetesimals, and their debris released in a collisional cascade, are under their mutual gravitational influence, which may result into non-axisymmetric structures in the debris disk. High angular resolution observations are required to investigate these effects and constrain the dynamical evolution of debris disks. Furthermore, multi-wavelength observations can provide information about the dust dynamics by probing different grain sizes. Here we present new VLT/SPHERE and ALMA observations of…
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