SPHERE/SHINE reveals concentric rings in the debris disk of HIP 73145
M. Feldt, J. Olofsson, A. Boccaletti, A.L. Maire, J. Milli, A. Vigan,, M. Langlois, Th. Henning, A. Moor, M. Bonnefoy, Z. Wahhaj, S. Desidera, R., Gratton, A. K\'osp\'al, P. Abraham, F. Menard, G. Chauvin, A.M. Lagrange, D., Mesa, G. Salter, E. Buenzli, J.e Lannier, C. Perrot

TL;DR
This study reveals multiple concentric rings in the debris disk of HIP 73145 using multiwavelength imaging, providing new insights into disk substructures and their potential origins.
Contribution
First detection of concentric rings in HIP 73145's debris disk in scattered light, combining multiwavelength imaging and modeling to analyze disk substructures.
Findings
Detection of a bright ring and additional inner structures
Identification of at least one secondary concentric ring
Confirmation that substructures are not artifacts of data analysis
Abstract
The debris disk of HIP73145 has been detected in scattered light in the near-IR, and at far-IR wavelengths before, but no substructure has been seen so far. Detection of such substructures in combination with detailed modeling can hint at the presence of perturbing planetary bodies, or reveal other mechanisms acting to replenish gas and dust reservoirs and forming structures such as spirals or rings. We obtained multiwavelength images with SPHERE in the near-IR in the H2 and H3 bands with the IRDIS camera and a 0.95-1.35 micron spectral cube with the IFS. Data were acquired in pupil-tracking mode, thus allowing for angular differential imaging. The SPHERE standard suite of angular differential imaging algorithms was applied. ALMA Band 6 observations complement the SPHERE data. We detect a bright ring of scattered light plus more structures inside, at least one of them forming a…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
