A near-infrared interferometric survey of debris-disk stars. VII. The hot/warm dust connection
O. Absil, L. Marion, S. Ertel, D. Defr\`ere, G. M. Kennedy, A., Romagnolo, J.-B. Le Bouquin, V. Christiaens, J. Milli, A. Bonsor, J., Olofsson, K. Y. L. Su, and J.-C. Augereau

TL;DR
This study uses near-infrared interferometry to investigate the relationship between hot exozodiacal dust and outer warm dust reservoirs around stars, finding no direct connection but a possible correlation with outer dust presence.
Contribution
First systematic interferometric survey exploring hot and warm dust connection around nearby stars, providing new insights into dust distribution and potential correlations.
Findings
17.1% detection rate of H-band excess around stars with warm dust
No significant difference in hot dust occurrence between stars with and without warm dust
Tentative evidence linking hot dust levels to outer dust reservoirs
Abstract
(abridged) Context. The origin of hot exozodiacal dust and its connection with outer dust reservoirs remains unclear. Aims. We aim to explore the possible connection between hot exozodiacal dust and warm dust reservoirs (> 100 K) in asteroid belts. Methods. We use precision near-infrared interferometry with VLTI/PIONIER to search for resolved emission at H band around a selected sample of nearby stars. Results. Our observations reveal the presence of resolved near-infrared emission around 17 out of 52 stars, four of which are shown to be due to a previously unknown stellar companion. The 13 other H-band excesses are thought to originate from the thermal emission of hot dust grains. Taking into account earlier PIONIER observations, and after reevaluating the warm dust content of all our PIONIER targets through spectral energy distribution modeling, we find a detection rate of…
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