TL;DR
This paper presents a method to map physical quantities in protoplanetary disks from scattered light images, accounting for disk shape and stellar irradiation, to better understand dust properties and scattering behavior.
Contribution
The authors develop a novel technique that incorporates disk flaring into the projection of scattering surfaces, enabling more accurate dust phase function retrieval from scattered light images.
Findings
Flaring disk models better explain brightness variations in observations.
Dust grains in the disk surface show a forward scattering peak.
Correct stellar irradiation scaling is essential for interpreting disk images.
Abstract
High-contrast scattered light observations have revealed the surface morphology of several dozens of protoplanetary disks at optical and near-infrared wavelengths. Inclined disks offer the opportunity to measure part of the phase function of the dust grains that reside in the disk surface which is essential for our understanding of protoplanetary dust properties and the early stages of planet formation. We aim to construct a method which takes into account how the flaring shape of the scattering surface of an (optically thick) protoplanetary disk projects onto the image plane of the observer. This allows us to map physical quantities (scattering radius and scattering angle) onto scattered light images and retrieve stellar irradiation corrected (r^2-scaled) images and dust phase functions. We apply the method on archival polarized intensity images of the protoplanetary disk around HD…
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