Revealing asymmetrical dust distribution in the inner regions of HD 141569
Garima Singh, Trisha Bhowmik, Anthony Boccaletti, Philippe Th\'ebault,, Quentin Kral, Julien Milli, Johan Mazoyer, Eric Pantin, Johan Olofsson, Ryan, Boukrouche, Emmanuel Di Folco, Markus Janson, Maud Langlois, Anne Lise Maire,, Arthur Vigan, Myriam Benisty

TL;DR
This study reveals an asymmetrical dust distribution in the inner debris ring of HD 141569A, suggesting a possible collision origin, and characterizes the grain properties through polarimetric imaging and modeling.
Contribution
It introduces an azimuthally varying dust density model to explain the asymmetry and provides the first detailed polarization and spectral analysis of the inner ring.
Findings
Dust density peaks in the south-west at 220-238 degrees.
The ring shows asymmetry with intensity peaking in the south-east in polarimetry.
Grain properties suggest a mixture of porous astro-silicate and carbonaceous grains.
Abstract
We obtained polarimetric differential imaging of a gas-rich debris disk around HD 141569A with SPHERE in the H-band to compare the scattering properties of the innermost ring at 44 au with former observations in total intensity with the same instrument. In polarimetric imaging, we observed that the intensity of the ring peaks in the south-east, mostly in the forward direction, whereas in total intensity imaging, the ring is detected only at the south. This noticeable characteristic suggests a non-uniform dust density in the ring. We implemented a density function varying azimuthally along the ring and generated synthetic images both in polarimetry and in total intensity, which are then compared to the actual data. We find that the dust density peaks in the south-west at an azimuthal angle of with a rather broad width of .…
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