New Mid-Infrared Imaging Constraints on Companions and Protoplanetary Disks around six Young Stars
D. J. M. Petit dit de la Roche, N. Oberg, M. E. van den Ancker, I., Kamp, R. van Boekel, D. Fedele, V. D.Ivanov, M. Kasper, H. U. K\"aufl, M., Kissler-Patig, P. A. Miles-P\'aez, E. Pantin, S. P. Quanz, Ch. Rab,, R.Siebenmorgen, and L. B. F. M. Waters

TL;DR
This study uses deep mid-infrared imaging with VLT to analyze six young star disks, constraining their structures and searching for planetary companions, leading to improved disk models and upper limits on companion brightness.
Contribution
It provides the deepest mid-infrared observations to date of these disks, refines physical models, and sets new upper limits on potential planetary companions.
Findings
Resolved three disks and measured their properties.
Refined the ProDiMo model for HD 100546, increasing cavity size and PAH abundance.
Ruled out planetary-mass companions above certain luminosity thresholds.
Abstract
Mid-infrared imaging traces the sub-micron and micron sized dust grains in protoplanetary disks and it offers constraints on the geometrical properties of the disks and potential companions, particularly if those companions have circumplanetary disks. We use the VISIR instrument and its upgrade NEAR on the VLT to take new mid-infrared images of five (pre-)transition disks and one circumstellar disk with proposed planets and obtain the deepest resolved mid-infrared observations to date in order to put new constraints on the sizes of the emitting regions of the disks and the presence of possible companions. We derotate and stack the data to find the disk properties. Where available we compare the data to ProDiMo (Protoplanetary Disk Model) radiation thermo-chemical models to achieve a deeper understanding of the underlying physical processes within the disks. We apply the circularised PSF…
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