A Circumplanetary Disk Around PDS70c
Myriam Benisty, Jaehan Bae, Stefano Facchini, Miriam Keppler, Richard, Teague, Andrea Isella, Nicolas T. Kurtovic, Laura M. Perez, Anibal Sierra,, Sean M. Andrews, John Carpenter, Ian Czekala, Carsten Dominik, Thomas, Henning, Francois Menard, Paola Pinilla, Alice Zurlo

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution ALMA observations to detect and characterize a circumplanetary disk around PDS70c, providing insights into its dust mass and spatial extent, and revealing complex disk structures within the system.
Contribution
First direct detection and spatial resolution of a circumplanetary disk around PDS70c using ALMA, constraining its dust mass and size.
Findings
Confirmed a compact circumplanetary disk around PDS70c
Measured dust mass of the disk to be approximately 0.031 Earth masses
Detected extended emission near PDS70b and detailed disk structures
Abstract
PDS70 is a unique system in which two protoplanets, PDS70b and c, have been discovered within the dust-depleted cavity of their disk, at 22 and 34au respectively, by direct imaging at infrared wavelengths. Subsequent detection of the planets in the H line indicates that they are still accreting material through circumplanetary disks. In this Letter, we present new Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) observations of the dust continuum emission at 855m at high angular resolution (20mas, 2.3au) that aim to resolve the circumplanetary disks and constrain their dust masses. Our observations confirm the presence of a compact source of emission co-located with PDS70c, spatially separated from the circumstellar disk and less extended than 1.2au in radius, a value close to the expected truncation radius of the cicumplanetary disk at a third of the…
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