A single-armed spiral in the protoplanetary disk around HD34282 ?
J. de Boer, C. Ginski, G. Chauvin, F. Menard, M. Benisty, C. Dominik,, K. Maaskant, J.H. Girard, G. van der Plas, A. Garufi, C. Perrot, T. Stolker,, H. Avenhaus, A. Bohn, A. Delboulbe, M. Jaquet, T. Buey, O. Moller-Nilsson, J., Pragt, T. Fusco

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution polarimetric imaging to analyze the three-dimensional structure of the protoplanetary disk around HD 34282, revealing a potential single-armed spiral structure after deprojection.
Contribution
First detailed 3D morphological analysis of HD 34282's disk using height-corrected deprojection, identifying a possible single-armed spiral structure.
Findings
Detected a complex scattering surface with an inner cavity and inclined bright ring.
Identified an azimuthal asymmetry or blob at 0.4" beyond the ring.
Revealed a circular ring at 88 au that may be part of a single-armed spiral.
Abstract
During the evolution of protoplanetary disks into planetary systems we expect to detect signatures that trace mechanisms such as planet-disk interaction. Protoplanetary disks display a large variety of structures in recently published high-spatial resolution images. However, the three-dimensional morphology of these disks is often difficult to infer from the two-dimensional projected images we observe. We spatially resolve the disk around HD 34282 using VLT/SPHERE in polarimetric imaging mode. We retrieve a profile for the height of the scattering surface to create a height-corrected deprojection, which simulates a face-on orientation. The disk displays a complex scattering surface. An inner clearing or cavity extending up to r<0.28" (88 au) is surrounded by a bright inclined (i = 56 deg) ring with a position angle of 119 deg. The center of this ring is offset from the star along the…
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