Multi-wavelength, spatially resolved modelling of HD 48682's debris disc
S. Hengst, J. P. Marshall, J. Horner, S. C. Marsden

TL;DR
This study combines multi-wavelength imaging and radiative transfer modelling to characterize the structure and dust properties of the debris disc around HD 48682, revealing a broad, collisionally active belt with small dust grains.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed spatially resolved model of HD 48682's debris disc, constraining its size, width, orientation, and dust grain characteristics using combined observational data and MCMC analysis.
Findings
Disc radius approximately 89 au
Disc width about 0.41 of its radius
Presence of small dust grains (~0.6 microns)
Abstract
Asteroids and comets (planetesimals) are created in gas- and dust-rich protoplanetary discs. The presence of these planetesimals around main-sequence stars is usually inferred from the detection of excess continuum emission at infrared wavelengths from dust grains produced by destructive processes within these discs. Modelling of the disc structure and dust grain properties for those discs is often hindered by the absence of any meaningful constraint on the location and spatial extent of the disc. Multi-wavelength, spatially resolved imaging is thus invaluable in refining the interpretation of these systems. Observations of HD 48682 at far-infrared (Spitzer,Herschel) and sub-millimetre (JCMT, SMA) wavelengths indicated the presence of an extended, cold debris disc with a blackbody temperature of 57.9 +\- 0.7 K. Here, we combined these data to perform a comprehensive study of the disc…
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