Evidence for a massive dust-trapping vortex connected to spirals: a multi-wavelength analysis of the HD~135344B protoplanetary disk
P. Cazzoletti, E. F. van Dishoeck, P. Pinilla, M. Tazzari, S., Facchini, N. van der Marel, M. Benisty, A. Garufi, L. P\'erez

TL;DR
This study provides multi-wavelength evidence for a massive dust-trapping vortex in the HD~135344B protoplanetary disk, linking it to observed spiral arms and asymmetries, and suggesting potential planetary origins.
Contribution
First multi-wavelength analysis confirming a dust-trapping vortex in HD~135344B and linking it to spiral structures and asymmetries in the disk.
Findings
Resolved the asymmetric disk into a ring and crescent shape.
Detected a spectral index decrease indicating large grains in the vortex.
Observed azimuthal shift of vortex peak with wavelength, confirming dust trapping.
Abstract
Spiral arms, rings and large scale asymmetries are structures observed in high resolution observations of protoplanetary disks, and it appears that some of the disks showing spiral arms in scattered light also show asymmetries in millimeter-sized dust. HD~135344B is one of these disks. Planets are invoked as the origin of these structures, but no planet has been observed so far. We investigate the nature of the asymmetric structure in the HD~135344B disk in order to understand the origin of the spirals and of the asymmetry seen in this disk. Ultimately, we aim at understanding whether or not one or more planets are needed to explain such structures. We present new ALMA sub-0.1" resolution observations in Band 3 and 4. The high spatial resolution allows us to characterize the mm-dust morphology of the disk. The low optical depth of continuum emission probes the bulk of the dust in…
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