The circumstellar disk HD$\,$169142: gas, dust and planets acting in concert?
A. Pohl, M. Benisty, P. Pinilla, C. Ginski, J. de Boer, H. Avenhaus,, Th. Henning, A. Zurlo, A. Bocaletti, J.-C. Augereau, T. Birnstiel, C., Dominik, S. Facchini, D. Fedele, M. Janson, M. Keppler, Q. Kral, M. Langlois,, R. Ligi, A.-L. Maire, F. M\'enard, M. Meyer, C. Pinte

TL;DR
This study uses polarized light imaging and dust evolution models to analyze the structure of the HD169142 disk, revealing multiple gaps and rings likely influenced by planet-disk interactions, with implications for dust dynamics and planet formation.
Contribution
It provides detailed observational evidence of disk substructures and evaluates dust evolution models, highlighting the complexity of interpreting planet-induced features.
Findings
Confirmed double ring structure at 21 and 66 au.
Detected a faint third gap at 82-85 au.
Dust models suggest dust filtration and fragmentation processes are key.
Abstract
HD169142 is an excellent target to investigate signs of planet-disk interaction due to the previous evidence of gap structures. We performed J-band (~1.2{\mu}m) polarized intensity imaging of HD169142 with VLT/SPHERE. We observe polarized scattered light down to 0.16" (~19 au) and find an inner gap with a significantly reduced scattered light flux. We confirm the previously detected double ring structure peaking at 0.18" (~21 au) and 0.56" (~66 au), and marginally detect a faint third gap at 0.70"-0.73" (~82-85 au). We explore dust evolution models in a disk perturbed by two giant planets, as well as models with a parameterized dust size distribution. The dust evolution model is able to reproduce the ring locations and gap widths in polarized intensity, but fails to reproduce their depths. It, however, gives a good match with the ALMA dust continuum image at 1.3 mm. Models with a…
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