Shadows and spirals in the protoplanetary disk HD 100453
M. Benisty, T. Stolker, A. Pohl, J. de Boer, G. Lesur, C. Dominik, C., P. Dullemond, M. Langlois, M. Min, K. Wagner, T. Henning, A. Juhasz, P., Pinilla, S. Facchini, D. Apai, R. van Boekel, A. Garufi, C. Ginski, F., M\'enard, C. Pinte, S.P. Quanz, A. Zurlo, A. Boccaletti

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution polarized imaging and radiative transfer modeling to analyze the complex disk morphology of HD 100453, revealing shadows, spirals, and potential influences of a companion star on disk features.
Contribution
First detailed polarized light imaging and modeling of HD 100453's disk, linking shadows and spirals to disk misalignment and possible tidal interactions.
Findings
Detection of shadows and spiral arms in the disk.
Disk misalignment of approximately 72 degrees.
Potential influence of a companion star on disk features.
Abstract
Understanding the diversity of planets requires to study the morphology and the physical conditions in the protoplanetary disks in which they form. We observed and spatially resolved the disk around the ~10 Myr old protoplanetary disk HD 100453 in polarized scattered light with SPHERE/VLT at optical and near-infrared wavelengths, reaching an angular resolution of ~0.02", and an inner working angle of ~0.09". We detect polarized scattered light up to ~0.42" (~48 au) and detect a cavity, a rim with azimuthal brightness variations at an inclination of 38 degrees, two shadows and two symmetric spiral arms. The spiral arms originate near the location of the shadows, close to the semi major axis. We detect a faint spiral-like feature in the SW that can be interpreted as the scattering surface of the bottom side of the disk, if the disk is tidally truncated by the M-dwarf companion currently…
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