Evolution of protoplanetary disks from their taxonomy in scattered light: spirals, rings, cavities, and shadows
Antonio Garufi, Myriam Benisty, Paola Pinilla, Marco Tazzari, Carsten, Dominik, Christian Ginski, Thomas Henning, Quentin Kral, Maud Langlois,, Francois Menard, Tomas Stolker, Judit Szulagyi, Marion Villenave, Gerrit van, der Plas

TL;DR
This study classifies 58 protoplanetary disks based on their scattered light features, revealing their evolutionary stages, structural diversity, and potential planet formation signatures, with implications for understanding disk development over time.
Contribution
The paper introduces a new taxonomy of protoplanetary disks in scattered light and links their observed structures to evolutionary stages and planet formation processes.
Findings
Over half of the disks show sub-structures like rings and spirals.
Faint disks are typically young and lack cavities.
Spirals and shadows may indicate the presence of planets of a few Jupiter masses.
Abstract
The variety of observed protoplanetary disks in polarimetric light motivates a taxonomical study to constrain their evolution and establish the current framework of this type of observations. We classified 58 disks with available polarimetric observations into six major categories (Ring, Spiral, Giant, Rim, Faint, and Small disks) based on their appearance in scattered light. We re-calculated the stellar and disk properties from the newly available GAIA DR2 and related these properties with the disk categories. More than a half of our sample shows disk sub-structures. For the remaining sources, the absence of detected features is due to their faintness, to their small size, or to the disk geometry. Faint disks are typically found around young stars and typically host no cavity. There is a possible dichotomy in the near-IR excess of sources with spiral-disks (high) and ring-disks (low).…
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