Irregular dust features around intermediate-mass young stars with GPI: signs of youth or misaligned disks?
Anna S.E. Laws, Tim J. Harries, Benjamin R. Setterholm, John D., Monnier, Evan A. Rich, Alicia N. Aarnio, Fred C. Adams, Sean Andrews, Jaehan, Bae, Nuria Calvet, Catherine Espaillat, Lee Hartmann, Sasha Hinkley, Andrea, Isella, Stefan Kraus, David Wilner, Zhaohuan Zhu

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution imaging to analyze irregular dust structures around five young stars, revealing complex environments possibly due to youth, misaligned disks, or companions, with new candidate companions discovered.
Contribution
First high-contrast imaging of these objects revealing irregular dust features and candidate companions, advancing understanding of circumstellar environments in young stars.
Findings
Irregular dust structures observed within 2'' of stars
Discovery of a new companion candidate around MWC 789
Two faint companion candidates around Hen 3-365
Abstract
We are undertaking a large survey of over thirty disks using the Gemini Planet Imager (GPI) to see whether the observed dust structures match spectral energy distribution (SED) predictions and have any correlation with stellar properties. GPI can observe near-infrared light scattered from dust in circumstellar environments using high-resolution Polarimetric Differential Imaging (PDI) with coronagraphy and adaptive optics. The data have been taken in J and H bands over two years, with inner working angles of 0.08'' and 0.11'' respectively. Ahead of the release of the complete survey results, here we present five objects with extended and irregular dust structures within 2'' of the central star. These objects are: FU Ori; MWC 789; HD 45677; Hen 3-365; and HD 139614. The observed structures are consistent with each object being a pre-main-sequence star with protoplanetary dust. The five…
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