First scattered light detection of a nearly edge-on transition disk around the T Tauri star RY Lup
M. Langlois, A. Pohl, A.-M. Lagrange, A.- L. Maire, D. Mesa, A., Boccaletti, R. Gratton, L. Denneulin, H. Klahr, A. Vigan, M. Benisty, C., Dominik, M. Bonnefoy, F. Menard, H. Avenhaus, A. Cheetham, R. Van Boekel, J., de Boer, G. Chauvin, S. Desidera, M. Feldt, R. Galicher

TL;DR
This study presents the first detection of scattered light from the nearly edge-on transition disk around RY Lup, revealing spiral features likely caused by planet-disk interactions, using high-resolution near-infrared imaging.
Contribution
First high-contrast imaging detection of scattered light from RY Lup's transition disk, revealing spiral structures and potential planet interactions.
Findings
Resolved the disk in scattered light at 0.9-1.6 microns.
Identified spiral arms likely caused by a planet.
Detected probable background objects.
Abstract
Transition disks are considered sites of ongoing planet formation, and their dust and gas distributions could be signposts of embedded planets. The transition disk around the T Tauri star RY Lup has an inner dust cavity and displays a strong silicate emission feature. Using high-resolution imaging we study the disk geometry, including non-axisymmetric features, and its surface dust grain, to gain a better understanding of the disk evolutionary process. Moreover, we search for companion candidates, possibly connected to the disk. We obtained high-contrast and high angular resolution data in the near-infrared with the VLT/SPHERE extreme adaptive optics instrument whose goal is to study the planet formation by detecting and characterizing these planets and their formation environments through direct imaging. We performed polarimetric imaging of the RY~Lup disk with IRDIS (at 1.6 microns),…
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