Dual-Wavelength ALMA Observations of Dust Rings in Protoplanetary Disks
Feng Long, Paola Pinilla, Gregory J. Herczeg, Sean M. Andrews, Daniel, Harsono, Doug Johnstone, Enrico Ragusa, Ilaria Pascucci, David J. Wilner,, Nathan Hendler, Jeff Jennings, Yao Liu, Giuseppe Lodato, Francois Menard,, Gerrit van de Plas, Giovanni Dipierro

TL;DR
This study uses dual-wavelength ALMA observations to analyze dust rings in three protoplanetary disks, revealing consistent ring locations, evidence of dust trapping, and implications for planet formation.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed comparison of dust ring structures at 1.3 mm and 2.9 mm in multiple disks, highlighting dust trapping and grain growth evidence.
Findings
Dust rings are consistent across wavelengths and mostly unresolved.
Spectral index variations indicate grain property changes.
Low optical depths suggest millimeter-sized grains in rings.
Abstract
We present new Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) observations for three protoplanetary disks in Taurus at 2.9\,mm and comparisons with previous 1.3\,mm data both at an angular resolution of (15\,au for the distance of Taurus). In the single-ring disk DS Tau, double-ring disk GO Tau, and multiple-ring disk DL Tau, the same rings are detected at both wavelengths, with radial locations spanning from 50 to 120\,au. To quantify the dust emission morphology, the observed visibilities are modeled with a parametric prescription for the radial intensity profile. The disk outer radii, taken as 95\% of the total flux encircled in the model intensity profiles, are consistent at both wavelengths for the three disks. Dust evolution models show that dust trapping in local pressure maxima in the outer disk could explain the observed patterns. Dust rings are mostly…
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