The challenge of measuring the phase function of debris disks. Application to HR\,4796
J. Olofsson, J. Milli, A. Bayo, Th. Henning, N. Engler

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new method to measure the phase function of debris disks, accounting for projection effects, and applies it to HR 4796, revealing the disk's vertical structure and highlighting potential biases in previous measurements.
Contribution
The study presents a novel approach to derive the phase function without assuming a parametrized form, addressing projection biases in debris disk observations.
Findings
Disk is not vertically flat at optical wavelengths.
Method reveals differences from previous phase function measurements.
Highlights potential biases in phase function estimation methods.
Abstract
Abridged: Debris disks are valuable systems to study dust properties. Because they are optically thin at all wavelengths, we have direct access to the properties of dust grains. One very promising technique to study them is to measure their phase function. Disks that are highly inclined are promising targets as a wider range of scattering angles can be probed. The phase function is usually either inferred by comparing the observations to synthetic disk models assuming a parametrized phase function, or estimating it from the surface brightness of the disk. We argue here that the latter approach can be biased due to projection effects leading to an increase in column density along the major axis of a non flat disk. We present a novel approach to account for those column density effects. The method remains model dependent, as one still requires a disk model to estimate the density…
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