A dusty filament and turbulent CO spirals in HD135344B-SAO206462
Simon Casassus, Valentin Christiaens, Miguel Carcamo, Sebastian Perez,, Philipp Weber, Barbara Ercolano, Nienke van der Marel, Christophe Pinte,, Ruobing Dong, Clement Baruteau, Lucas Cieza, Ewine van Dishoeck, Andres, Jordan, Daniel Price, Olivier Absil, Carla Arce-Tord

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution ALMA observations to analyze the complex structures, gas dynamics, and turbulence in the HD135344B protoplanetary disc, revealing potential planet-induced features and accretion processes.
Contribution
It provides new high-resolution ALMA data showing a filament connecting rings, turbulence in spirals, and detailed gas kinematics, advancing understanding of planet-disc interactions.
Findings
Detection of a filament connecting the rings.
Strong turbulence observed in the spiral arms.
Evidence of stellocentric accretion within the inner dust ring.
Abstract
Planet-disc interactions build up local pressure maxima that may halt the radial drift of protoplanetary dust, and pile it up in rings and crescents. ALMA observations of the HD135344B disc revealed two rings in the thermal continuum stemming from ~mm-sized dust. At higher frequencies the inner ring is brighter relative to the outer ring, which is also shaped as a crescent rather than a full ring. In near-IR scattered light images, the disc is modulated by a 2-armed grand-design spiral originating inside the ALMA inner ring. Such structures may be induced by a massive companion evacuating the central cavity, and by a giant planet in the gap separating both rings, that channels the accretion of small dust and gas through its filamentary wakes while stopping the larger dust from crossing the gap. Here we present ALMA observations in the J=(2-1)CO isotopologue lines and in the adjacent…
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